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  1. Graphs of Absolute Value Equations - Socratic

    Questions How do you graph absolute value equations on a coordinate plane? How do you create a table of values for an absolute value equation? How do you know which x values to choose …

  2. How do you graph y=6 abs[x-7]? | Socratic

    see explanation First do the normal graph of y=6x-7 without the modulus. graph {6x-7 [-10, 10, -5, 5]} Since the modulus is only applied to the x, think of it as a function. It is inside the bracket …

  3. Question #16bc5 - Socratic

    Another way to determine which graph is on top is to sketch the graphs. It is also possible to get the correct answer by choosing an order of subtraction and the making the final answer …

  4. How do you graph # f (x)=x^2+2#? - Socratic

    So, #f (x)# is a concave up parabola and has an absolute minimum value of #2# at #x=0#. The graph of #f (x)# is ahown below.

  5. How do you graph the inequality x >5 or x <-2? | Socratic

    How do you graph the inequality x> 5 or x <− 2? Algebra Linear Inequalities and Absolute Value Multi-Step Inequalities

  6. Additive Inverses and Absolute Values - Socratic

    Questions What are absolute values? What is the absolute value of -10 and 10? How do you know that the additive inverse of -20 is 20? How do you evaluate #|2-8|#?

  7. I've been struggling in this sound wave question for more

    The amplitude is the maximum absolute value of the wave. For sin or cos functions, the amplitude is the coefficient before the trigonometrics.Therefore the amplitude for y=1/4cos ( (2pi)/3theta) …

  8. Question #9ff5f - Socratic

    Question #9ff5f Algebra Linear Inequalities and Absolute Value Multi-Step Inequalities

  9. Question #810fc - Socratic

    Mar 25, 2016 · The action taking place is that you are looking at a standard graph of #tan (x)# and noting the y value on that graph for #2x#. You are then going back to the graph you are …

  10. By applying the rules for natural logarithms, how could 2ln|x| be ...

    ln(x^2) Apply the power rule for logarithms 2ln|x|=ln(|x|^2) As we know, the square of a positive or negative number is always positive, so |x|^2=x^2 and the answer becomes ln(x^2).