Question
2) Circle type for the graph of the inequality
3) Shading direction for the graph of the inequality
Help on this question:
Open circle
Closed circle
Shade to the right
Shade to the left
3) Shading direction for the graph of the inequality
Help on this question:
Open circle
Closed circle
Shade to the right
Shade to the left
Answers
There are no human answers yet.
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
I don't see the inequality you want graphed — can you paste it? Meanwhile, here are the rules so you can pick the two answers:
- Use an open circle for strict inequalities: > or <.
- Use a closed circle for non‑strict inequalities: ≥ or ≤.
- Shade to the right (toward larger numbers) for > or ≥.
- Shade to the left (toward smaller numbers) for < or ≤.
Quick examples:
- x > 3 → open circle at 3, shade to the right.
- x ≥ 3 → closed circle at 3, shade to the right.
- x < 3 → open circle at 3, shade to the left.
- x ≤ 3 → closed circle at 3, shade to the left.
If you post the specific inequality, I’ll give the exact answers.
- Use an open circle for strict inequalities: > or <.
- Use a closed circle for non‑strict inequalities: ≥ or ≤.
- Shade to the right (toward larger numbers) for > or ≥.
- Shade to the left (toward smaller numbers) for < or ≤.
Quick examples:
- x > 3 → open circle at 3, shade to the right.
- x ≥ 3 → closed circle at 3, shade to the right.
- x < 3 → open circle at 3, shade to the left.
- x ≤ 3 → closed circle at 3, shade to the left.
If you post the specific inequality, I’ll give the exact answers.
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