Answer: Ix+10I
Step-by-step explanation: To shift the graph 10 units to the left, we replace x with x+10. What's really going on is that the xy axis shifts 10 units to the right (because x is now x+10; eg, x = 2 ---> x+10 = 2+10 = 12) so it appears that the graph is moving to the left. The general rule is h(x) = g(x+10).
So,
g(x) = |x|
g(x+10) = |x+10| ... every x has been replaced with x+10
h(x) = g(x+10)
h(x) = |x+10|
We can use a graphing tool like GeoGebra to visually confirm we have the right answer (see attached). Note how a point like (0,0) on the green graph moves to (-10,0) on the red graph.
9514 1404 393
Answer:
not on the same line
Step-by-step explanation:
Any two distinct points define a line. Additional points may or may not be on that line. If they are on the line, they are collinear with other points on the same line.
Any point not on the line is noncollinear with the points that are on the line.
Answer:
The answer is C.
Step-by-step explanation:
3/4 is equal to 0.75. If you combine 0.75 with -20, then it is 20.75.
If A and B are equal:
Matrix A must be a diagonal matrix: FALSE.
We only know that A and B are equal, so they can both be non-diagonal matrices. Here's a counterexample:
![A=B=\left[\begin{array}{cc}1&2\\4&5\\7&8\end{array}\right]](https://tex.z-dn.net/?f=A%3DB%3D%5Cleft%5B%5Cbegin%7Barray%7D%7Bcc%7D1%262%5C%5C4%265%5C%5C7%268%5Cend%7Barray%7D%5Cright%5D)
Both matrices must be square: FALSE.
We only know that A and B are equal, so they can both be non-square matrices. The previous counterexample still works
Both matrices must be the same size: TRUE
If A and B are equal, they are literally the same matrix. So, in particular, they also share the size.
For any value of i, j; aij = bij: TRUE
Assuming that there was a small typo in the question, this is also true: two matrices are equal if the correspondent entries are the same.
Answer:
52°i think
Step-by-step explanation:
148°-96°=52°