When he used "K" and "L," that was basically the P-Q Formula. The coefficient of the leading squared term is 1, which is why the P-Q Formula only contains two variables. It's apparently more commonly-used outside of the States. I like it, and it is easier to derive -- especially with an area model -- than the Quadratic Formula is.
When he used "K" and "L," that was basically the P-Q Formula. The coefficient of the leading squared term is 1, which is why the P-Q Formula only contains two variables. It's apparently more commonly-used outside of the States. I like it, and it is easier to derive -- especially with an area model -- than the Quadratic Formula is.
I just wish you were my maths teacher all those years ago………fantastic!
Sir can you tell what was the formula derivation by the Indian scientist Shridharacharya
thank you
Solve: x²-(3^1/2+1)x +3^1/2=0
I have this in the book
somehow i became even more confused
🤨🤨🔥🔥🔥💥💥