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Mathematics 19 Online
OpenStudy (anonymous):

How would a sketch of a graph of these equations look like 1) y= \[2\sqrt[3]{x-8}-5\] 2) \[y= -3\sqrt[3]{x+1}+4\]

OpenStudy (anonymous):

beautiful!

OpenStudy (anonymous):

....what?

OpenStudy (anonymous):

the sketch, beautiful! LOL XD!

OpenStudy (anonymous):

anyone know?

OpenStudy (anonymous):

if youre trying to solve, use a eqnsolver on a calculator (fx100+ on Casio/Sharp) or use wolfram's eqn solver tools.

OpenStudy (anonymous):

Or, Do you know the graph of \(f(x) = \sqrt[3]{x}\)?

OpenStudy (anonymous):

nope, i tried plugging into an online graphing calculator and it only lets me do square roots not cube roots

OpenStudy (anonymous):

try this: http://www.algebrahelp.com/calculators/equation/

OpenStudy (anonymous):

http://www.numberempire.com/equationsolver.php or, even this.

OpenStudy (anonymous):

those don't show me the graph

OpenStudy (anonymous):

right, they dont. Wolfram Math does. try it.

OpenStudy (anonymous):

how would i put cube root?

OpenStudy (anonymous):

^3. they tell you how to at the sit itself. If youre usng mozilla or Opera, wolfram has a browser plugin to solve equations. :)

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