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For the math-heads

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  • J Jason Henderson

    Trig is all about circles. :cool: David Stone wrote: Ever try integrating polar equations? Not that I recall.

    "It is better to remain silent and be thought a fool than to open one's mouth and remove all doubt." - Abraham Lincoln

    Jason Henderson
    blog | articles

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    David Stone
    wrote on last edited by
    #21

    Jason Henderson wrote: Trig is all about circles. Trig is all about triangles. At least that's what I was always told...and that's what I've seen. Jason Henderson wrote: Not that I recall. Lucky...it's not fun at all.


    When I can talk about 64 bit processors and attract girls with my computer not my car, I'll come out of the closet. Until that time...I'm like "What's the ENTER key?" -Hockey on being a geek

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    • D David Stone

      Isn't math fun? :)


      When I can talk about 64 bit processors and attract girls with my computer not my car, I'll come out of the closet. Until that time...I'm like "What's the ENTER key?" -Hockey on being a geek

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      Roger Wright
      wrote on last edited by
      #22

      Some of my students are not enjoying it much.:( Last week's exam results were so bad that I'm retesting in a week. Seriously, you'd think that people who do perfectly on homework would pay attention on an exam, rather than racing through it and failing to read the questions completely.:doh: "Your village called -
      They're missing their idiot."

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      • D David Stone

        Jason Henderson wrote: Trig is all about circles. Trig is all about triangles. At least that's what I was always told...and that's what I've seen. Jason Henderson wrote: Not that I recall. Lucky...it's not fun at all.


        When I can talk about 64 bit processors and attract girls with my computer not my car, I'll come out of the closet. Until that time...I'm like "What's the ENTER key?" -Hockey on being a geek

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        Jason Henderson
        wrote on last edited by
        #23

        The basics of trig were taught to me using a circle of radius 1. Almost anything can be broken into right triangles and the hypotenouses of those triangles can be seen as the radius of a circle.

        "It is better to remain silent and be thought a fool than to open one's mouth and remove all doubt." - Abraham Lincoln

        Jason Henderson
        blog | articles

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        • M MS le Roux

          I'm playing around with graphing, and I'm trying to figure out the following: Draw a line from point A (0,10) to point B (100,10). Now draw a line from point B to point C, in such a way that C is below B, and angle ABC is 100 degrees. AB and BC have the same length. How do you calculate the coordinates of point C?

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          brianwelsch
          wrote on last edited by
          #24

          The answer is a set of coordinates, isn't it? anything on the ray starting at B through some point C which satisfies your criteria, is actually a valid response. I'm I way off my thinking here?

          "The beat goes on.. da-da-dum dadum dum"

          BW

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          • R Roger Wright

            Some of my students are not enjoying it much.:( Last week's exam results were so bad that I'm retesting in a week. Seriously, you'd think that people who do perfectly on homework would pay attention on an exam, rather than racing through it and failing to read the questions completely.:doh: "Your village called -
            They're missing their idiot."

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            joshfl
            wrote on last edited by
            #25

            Last week's exam results were so bad that I'm retesting in a week. Seriously, you'd think that people who do perfectly on homework would pay attention on an exam, rather than racing through it and failing to read the questions completely or id think they cheat on their homework lol todo.... :: insert inpirational text here ::

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            • D Daniel Turini

              In Portuguese, "boobies" :)


              Help me dominate the world - click this link and my army will grow

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              Jorgen Sigvardsson
              wrote on last edited by
              #26

              :laugh: I gotta remember that the next time I hit on a portugese speaking female mathematician/physicist. :-D "Hey baby. If you let me get cosine with your theta, I'll make you breakfast in the morning!" :-D -- Yeah well, my daddy can beat up your daddy!

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              • J Jason Henderson

                AB and BC are the same length, so we can assume they are radii of a circle with the origin at (100,10). Using polar coordinates, x=radius*(Cosine(Theta)) and y=radius*(Sine(Theta)): x=(100*cos(280)+100) = 117.365 y=(100*sin(280)+10) = -88.481 Roughly. If you apply the distance formula: distance=sqrt((x2-x1)^2 + (y2-y1)^2)) distance=sqrt(17^2 + (-98)^2)=sqrt(289+9604)=99.464 Pretty close to 100.

                "It is better to remain silent and be thought a fool than to open one's mouth and remove all doubt." - Abraham Lincoln

                Jason Henderson
                blog | articles

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                Jorgen Sigvardsson
                wrote on last edited by
                #27

                When I read this, I think it's high time that MathML is assimilated into the web standards collective (IE, Mozilla, you name it). Imagine all the beautiful and geeky stuff we could write in the lounge! :-D I remember the university days with LATEX. Heck, even I could write really good looking reports with it. :cool: -- Yeah well, my daddy can beat up your daddy!

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                • J Jason Henderson

                  The length of BC is off by 10.

                  "It is better to remain silent and be thought a fool than to open one's mouth and remove all doubt." - Abraham Lincoln

                  Jason Henderson
                  blog | articles

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                  Iain Clarke Warrior Programmer
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #28

                  Oops. :doh: I read it as (100,10) - (10,10)! My trig was right though. Until someone corrects me on that! Iain

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