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Mathematics 12 Online
OpenStudy (anonymous):

Newton's First Law

OpenStudy (anonymous):

evry body continues to be in a rest or motion unless acted upon by any external force.

OpenStudy (anonymous):

When viewed in an inertial reference frame, an object either is at rest or moves at a constant velocity, unless acted upon by an external force.

OpenStudy (austinl):

Hi there! Welcome to OpenStudy @D.J. If you have any questions about the site, feel free to message me! Now on to your question, Newton's First Law is often described as: "An object at rest stays at rest and an object in motion stays in motion with the same speed and in the same direction unless acted upon by an unbalanced force." Have a great day!

OpenStudy (anonymous):

\( \large Since~you~seem~new~here:\\\bf\Huge{~~\color{red}{\boxed{W}}\color{#FF9200}{\boxed{E}}\color{#FFDB00}{\boxed{L}}\color{#B6ff00}{\boxed{C}}\color{#00ff49}{\boxed{O}}\color{#00DBff}{\boxed{M}}\color{#B600ff}{\boxed{E}}\\~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~\boxed{T}\boxed{O}\\~~~~~~~~~~~\color{#0092ff}{\boxed{O}}\color{#0092ff}{\boxed{P}}\color{#0092ff}{\boxed{E}}\color{#0092ff}{\boxed{N}}\color{#7cc517}{\boxed{S}}\color{#7cc517}{\boxed{T}}\color{#7cc517}{\boxed{U}}\color{#7cc517}{\boxed{D}}\color{#7cc517}{\boxed{Y}}\color{#7cc517}{\boxed{!}}} \\ \large\bf You~can~read~a~\underline{\href{ /study#/updates/527023d6e4b08ad7c0d7b5bc }{guide}}~about~openstudy~here. \\ \it P.S.~here's~a~link~to~the~\underline{\href{/study#/groups/physics}{Physics}}~section~you're~in~Mathematics~now.\)

OpenStudy (anonymous):

@zimmah How can you write like that >_> lol

OpenStudy (anonymous):

there's a guide on \(LaTex\) somewhere i'll try to find a link

OpenStudy (anonymous):

\(\small if~you~want~a~tutorial~on~how~to~make~fancy~looking~messages~like~this,\\\small and~other~useful~commands~in~LaTeX~(the~code~used~on~this~website)~you~can~find~it~\underline{\href{ /study#/updates/51fbcbade4b0cc46c14a461d}{here }}\)

OpenStudy (austinl):

@GirlByte You can right click on the \(\LaTeX\) code, and then mouse over "show math as", then click TEX commands. That will show you the specific code of the shown latex.

OpenStudy (anonymous):

Thanks lol

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