Answer:
A Totals row in Access helps you see, at a quick glance, what the totals are for columns on a datasheet. For example, in a table of purchase information, we can show the sum of the price, or units purchased, or a total count of the items by adding a Totals row to the datasheet:
Step-by-step explanation:
Answer:
1. x =0; x = -7
2. x = -3; x = 10
3. x = -5; x = -4
Step-by-step explanation:
(1). 6x² + 42x = 0
6x (x + 7) = 0
6x = 0. OR. x + 7 = 0
x = 0/6. x = 0 - 7
x = 0. x = -7
x = 0
x = -7
(2). x² - 7x - 30 = 0
The factors here are (3, -10)
x² - 10x + 3x - 30 = 0
x ( x - 10) + 3 ( x - 10) = 0
(x + 3) ( x - 10) = 0
x + 3 = 0 OR. x - 10 = 0
x = 0-3. x = 0 + 10
x = -3. x = 10
x = -3
x = 10
(3). x² + 9x + 20 = 0
The factors are ( 4, 5)
x² + 4x + 5x + 20 = 0
x ( x + 4) + 5 ( x + 4) = 0
(x + 5) (x + 4) = 0
x + 5 = 0 . OR. x + 4 = 0
x = 0-5. x = 0 - 4
x = -5. x = -4
x = -5
x = -4
Um probably bc ur not asking the correct ones?
Ten hundredths: 10/100 = 1/10
Simplifies to: 0.1 (one-tenth)
Answer:
Joey ran 39 yards
Step-by-step explanation:
a²+b²=c²
15²+36²=c²
225+1296=c²
1521=c²
√1521=√c²
39=c