This question has extraneous info to trick you.
f(x) = g(x)h(x) ⇒ f'(x) = g'(x)h'(x) . Letting x = 10, we get f'(10) = g'(10)h'(10). then just plug in the values provided. g(10) and h(10) are there to throw you off, just use g'(10) and h'(10).
So f'(10), pronounced "eff prime of ten", = 0 * 35 = 0.
If the question were asking for f(10) instead of f'(10) then you would use g(10) and h(10), ⇒-4*560=90.
Answer:
3/8 4/9 42% 0.35
Step-by-step explanation:
hope this right
Answer:
384 inches squared
Step-by-step explanation:
The surface area for one of the sides is 8 x 8 = 64
There are 6 sides so 64 x 6 = 384
The data below shows the average number of text messages sent daily by a group of people: 7, 8, 4, 7, 5, 2, 5, 4, 5, 7, 4, 8, 2,
enot [183]
It all depends. You've given us an incredibly vague question.
The outlier could be a number that's low or quite high. Also, outliers
shouldn't really contribute towards the value of the mean, median or
range related to a group of data.
They are called outliers because they are bizarre results or numbers
and should be detached from groups of data. Outliers by definition
are abnormalities or anomalies.
I'd say outliers don't really change anything, unless you actually want
to give them credibility or weight.
Large outliers can inflate the value of means, medians and ranges.
Small outliers will invariably deflate the value of means and medians.
Answer:
y=2/7x
Step-by-step explanation:
y=mx+b where m=slope and b=y-intercept,
y=2/7x+0
y=2/7x