We have that
<span>tan(theta)sin(theta)+cos(theta)=sec(theta)
</span><span>[sin(theta)/cos(theta)] sin(theta)+cos(theta)=sec(theta)
</span>[sin²<span>(theta)/cos(theta)]+cos(theta)=sec(theta)
</span><span>the next step in this proof
is </span>write cos(theta)=cos²<span>(theta)/cos(theta) to find a common denominator
so
</span>[sin²(theta)/cos(theta)]+[cos²(theta)/cos(theta)]=sec(theta)<span>
</span>{[sin²(theta)+cos²(theta)]/cos(theta)}=sec(theta)<span>
remember that
</span>sin²(theta)+cos²(theta)=1
{[sin²(theta)+cos²(theta)]/cos(theta)}------------> 1/cos(theta)
and
1/cos(theta)=sec(theta)-------------> is ok
the answer is the option <span>B.)
He should write cos(theta)=cos^2(theta)/cos(theta) to find a common denominator.</span>
Answer:
I dont know what sin is
Step-by-step explanation:
Answer:
The system of the equations has no solution; the two lines are parallel.
Step-by-step explanation:
The equations have the same slope. In standard form, this can be seen as the same coefficients for x and y. We will multiply the second equation by -12 to reveal this.

This means the equations are parallel and will never cross. There is no solution.
Answer:
B
Step-by-step explanation:
(f+g)(x)=f(x)+g(x)
3x+1+x2-6 = x2+3x-5
Answer:
-4< c
Step-by-step explanation:
2> -2-c
Add 2 to each side
2+2> -2+2-c.
4 > -c
Divide each side by -1. Remember that dividing by -1 will flip the inequality.
4/-1 < -c/-1
-4< c