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Mathematics 11 Online
OpenStudy (anonymous):

f(x)=4x+1 and g(x)=x^2-5, find (f/g)(x). Would it just be 4x+1/x^2-5?

OpenStudy (anonymous):

yes (4x+1)/(x^2-5) do you want me to calculate

OpenStudy (anonymous):

No, I just wanted to double check. Thanks :)

OpenStudy (anonymous):

kk!! :)

OpenStudy (anonymous):

damn it, I got it wrong lol :D

OpenStudy (anonymous):

wat??? lol!!

OpenStudy (anonymous):

apparently it was that answer with ,x doesn't equal =/- square root 5...

OpenStudy (anonymous):

4x+1/x^2-5, x doesn't equal +/- square root 5 but I don't know how the square root 5 came into play?

OpenStudy (eyust707):

What happens when you plug in \(\pm \sqrt{5}\) for x?

OpenStudy (anonymous):

oh, wow....DAMN IT. That is disappointing that it was that easy, here I thought I was missing something important. Haha, thanks a lot...

OpenStudy (eyust707):

no problem =)

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