yes, it does not matter if the y is at the beginning or at the end. However, most teachers usually prefer to have the y at the beginning as it is easier to read.
Parenthesis, then exponents, then subtraction.
Answer: Choice C

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Explanation:
The 1/2 out front handles the vertical compression by 1/2. For example, if two points are vertically spaced by 10 units, then their new vertical distance is now (1/2)*10 = 5 units.
The x+3 in the exponent means "shift 3 units to the left". Effectively what's going on is that the old input x is now x+3, ie 3 units larger than before. This shifts the xy axis itself 3 units to the right. If we held the curve fixed in place while the xy axis moved like this, then it gives the illusion the curve is moving 3 units to the left.
Then finally the -2 at the very end shifts the curve down 2 units. This is because whatever the y coordinate is, we subtract 2 from it to do this vertical shifting. For example, the point (0,62.5) shifts 2 units down to (0,60.5)
Yes it is. Hope this helps
Step-by-step explanation:
Find 1 pack of pencil:
1 pack = 10 ÷ 5 = $2
9 packs = 2 x 9 = 18
Answer: $18