Duplicate Question
The question on this page has been marked as a duplicate question.
Original Question
How do I solve this: The absolute value of ax+b is less than or equal to c for the terms of x in terms of a, b, and c where a>0...Asked by arya
How do I solve this:
The absolute value of ax+b is less than or equal to c for the terms of x in terms of a, b, and c where a>0 and c>0
-Then they ask:
The absolute value of ax+b is more than or equal to c for the terms of x in terms of a, b, and c where a>0 and c>0
It's the same thing except the second one is more than...
The absolute value of ax+b is less than or equal to c for the terms of x in terms of a, b, and c where a>0 and c>0
-Then they ask:
The absolute value of ax+b is more than or equal to c for the terms of x in terms of a, b, and c where a>0 and c>0
It's the same thing except the second one is more than...
Answers
Answered by
bobpursley
I have looked at it, and I have no idea what the question is.
Answered by
arya
ummm... okay l l <--these are going to be absolute value bars.
1.
Solve lax+bl <or equal to c for x in terms of a, b, and c where a>0 and c>0
2.
Now solve lax+bl >or equal to c for x in terms of a, b, and c where a>0 and c>0
this help?
1.
Solve lax+bl <or equal to c for x in terms of a, b, and c where a>0 and c>0
2.
Now solve lax+bl >or equal to c for x in terms of a, b, and c where a>0 and c>0
this help?
There are no AI answers yet. The ability to request AI answers is coming soon!
Submit Your Answer
We prioritize human answers over AI answers.
If you are human, and you can answer this question, please submit your answer.