help!!
Did you read what I said on your last question?
Opening and clsing questions just to get people to answer them is another form of abuse.
im not asking them to just blurt the answer thank you very much, I'm looking for how to get it too
You previous posts suggest the contrary.
If you were looking for this "how to get it", you would be replying at this point, because it would illustrate that you need help understanding the concept.
@inkyvoyd please alert me to that behavior @sammy90210 It seems someone decided to get all their overdue work done today, I have been watching your behavior since I first logged on this morning
i don't have any over due work, I'm simply over working, I'm off school sick, and have been online school work all day
@TuringTest , I'll try to remember to use that report button in the future (lol), and, I'll leave this to you, because it's not my job lol...
@sammy90210 it has been a ceaseless barrage of questions, all of the same type and you always close as soon as you get an answer, without asking how it was gotten. I haven't seen you do anything against the code of conduct yet, but I assure you that answer-hunters are not welcome, and I hope that you are not found to be one of them.
i close them because when the answer is posted, its also posted with an explanation
I will be verifying that...
take a look, they are all there
do you mean to tell me that you understood how to do this problem? http://openstudy.com/users/sammy90210#/updates/4fb427e5e4b05565342a0c23 I can test that very quickly
if you understood that problem than you should have no trouble telling me what\[(x^{1/2})^{3/2}\]is
(x to the 1/2 power ) to the 3/2 power
yeah, and how does it simplify?
and i didn't know this was an interrogation site
It's also not an answer-pumping site so from now on I will have to make sure that you are not given a free ride Just so you have the heads up
@TuringTest , if you haven't already, please check abuse reports. I got a personal message with a bit of profanity.
I seem to be missing messages :/ but thanks, I'll look
what are you 5 @inkyvoyd
this site is for everyone, and inkyvoid is helping this site accommodate younger users, which we want
@sammy90210 , I will pretend you have not said that. As for the question, you want to get multiply by a common factor that gets rid of x in the denominator.
*you want to multiply by
well I'm a younger user, and he's doing quite the opposite
how old are you sammy ?
17
In any case, you are looking to find the least common multiple of the three fractions.
And, @sammy90210 I'm actually a few years younger than you.
So, to recap, you want to do this Find the least common multiple of the three denominators (x, 6, and 3) multiply each term by that least common multiple solve the resulting equation re substitute x in the equation to make sure you did not get any extraneous solutions. Ask me if you ave any more questions about the process.
Join our real-time social learning platform and learn together with your friends!