im not sure i did it right but i tried 8 ^ 12
It's the last option again. You have 1 linear factor (3<em>x</em>) and 2 copies of a quadratic factor (<em>x</em>² + 10), and the partial fractions with the quadratic factor need to have a linear polynomial in the numerator.
Then answer you seek is 133.
If Gavin got 11 sweets, then the new ratio would be: 11:44:11
Colin got 44 sweets.
Answer:
n = 6
Step-by-step explanation:
4n + 2 = 26,
4n = 24,
n = 6