I love you and your videos they totally helped me understand. I've missed a month of school and I don't understand math class or what I'm learning but now I do. Thank you.
Alex Viola my teacher teaches too fast nad the only way you will understand is if you come after school. alot of us have jobs right after school all week so this isnt an option for most of us but the people who can come after school have high Bs and As wish she could slow down like she does in tutoring for us who cant come after school
This really helped me 👏🏾👏🏾 I wish my teacher could teach like this because I'm a slow learner I have all honors classes but math and it really frustrates me when my teacher goes too fast and doesn't explain it then gets mad at me when I fail a test 😐 but thanks for this 😌
you are the best Teacher even if left handed your hand writting is better than some right handed people and is the best gift God gave you and your teaching is slow and superb I called it Aha technique in our driving school here in London Even American president is left handed Ps David
Thanks for the video! It helped me a lot. I missed class when this lesson was taught so I was so confused but you made it easier to understand! Hopefully I'll do good on my next math exam :'D
It may be helpful to know that All exponent rules are consequences of The Exponent Law: f(a+b)=e^{a+b}=(e^a)x(e^b)=f(a)f(b), which is an isomorphism that map the additive group of all real numbers to the multiplicative group of positive real numbers.
I have a doubt. I can't really type this problem down but if you see the third property, that is when you multiply the exponent, there is a sum saying the answer is 2 raised to the power of 6. How is that? Aren't you supposed to first multiply 2 times 2 that is 4, then multiply the exponents that is 3 times 2 is 6. The answer becomes 4 raised to the power of 6. Hope you understood...=/
For the last problem, why wouldn't it initially simplify to y^3/x^-2....the quotient rule is defined as x^a/x^b = x^(a-b)....so wouldn't x^(2-4)= x^-2 ?
lol you almost have it, (2^3)(2^3) simply equal 2^6, when you multiply two things with the SAME base (in this case the base is 2) then you add the exponents, just like (2^1)(2^1)=2^2, which is just saying 2 times 2 is 2 squared, you don't multiply the bases always leave it as it is
This is way better than my teacher like I understand this and he made it seem so hard thank you so much
Thanks a ton for taking the time to do this. I wish more people can explain things your way!
Are you kidding!!! I learnt more than I did in my first term of maths with this little video. I am so flippen great full right now.
best way to study for a math test! Learned more in 12 minutes than in 12 days of my boring math class
Thank you so much I understand this better then how my teachers been explaing it I might actually past this quiz :D😂
same here
I love you and your videos they totally helped me understand. I've missed a month of school and I don't understand math class or what I'm learning but now I do. Thank you.
If only my teacher could teach like this
My teacher teaches us 5 ways to do it in the same class. When i figure it out one way, she shows us another way, and i get very confused.
Alex Viola my teacher teaches too fast nad the only way you will understand is if you come after school. alot of us have jobs right after school all week so this isnt an option for most of us but the people who can come after school have high Bs and As wish she could slow down like she does in tutoring for us who cant come after school
Same
This really helped me 👏🏾👏🏾 I wish my teacher could teach like this because I'm a slow learner I have all honors classes but math and it really frustrates me when my teacher goes too fast and doesn't explain it then gets mad at me when I fail a test 😐 but thanks for this 😌
thank you very much your channel is the best... your helping many people succeed
I like how the problems are explained where I can understand thank you for sharing
THIS IS WHAT WE ARE DOING IN OUR MATH CLASSS IT HELPED US ALOT
Way better than my teacher, thanks!
Thanks for the clear and to the point videos yhey really help.
you r genius you helped me out of exams congrats!!!
:)
you are the best Teacher even if left handed your hand writting is better than some right handed people and is the best gift God gave you and your teaching is slow and superb I called it Aha technique in our driving school here in London Even American president is left handed
Ps David
Thanks for the video! It helped me a lot. I missed class when this lesson was taught so I was so confused but you made it easier to understand! Hopefully I'll do good on my next math exam :'D
Gosh, you make this so much more easy!! My math teacher doesn't teach as well as you!! :O
Thanks bro, watched this before my math test.
thanks bro
Thnx soooo much.. it reallllly helped.. at least I know part of the test
It may be helpful to know that All exponent rules are consequences of
The Exponent Law: f(a+b)=e^{a+b}=(e^a)x(e^b)=f(a)f(b), which is an isomorphism that map the additive group of all real numbers to the multiplicative group of positive real numbers.
congrats : ) glad i could help!
good for your school. someone is getting it right.
Thanks alot this really helped
Thank you so much this video really helped me
This was incredibly helpful, thanks so much!
Nice,i did learn more about exponent. Thank you
thats stupid boooyyyy.
You know me dude...see ya
Thank you so much! This was very helpful :)
Thank you for helping me Mr MATHICAL MAGIC
Thank you so much so much so much this helped me so much
I'm left handed too and thanks for the help
I have a test tomorrow on this thanks
Thank you for making this video!
Excellent, Thank you!
well, people can do whatever they want in a video. but a professor texting in class is also a no-no :)
no
thanks for the post!
I have a doubt. I can't really type this problem down but if you see the third property, that is when you multiply the exponent, there is a sum saying the answer is 2 raised to the power of 6. How is that? Aren't you supposed to first multiply 2 times 2 that is 4, then multiply the exponents that is 3 times 2 is 6. The answer becomes 4 raised to the power of 6. Hope you understood...=/
i wish you were my teacher, thank youu
Wow thank you lol really wish I had you as my Professor haha
@patrickJMT Is the answer actually 2^6? I thought that we're supposed to keep the bases the same.
ok. OK.
this helps a lot
does (2^3)(2^3) = 4^6 ?
Great tutorial
Great video
I love your videos awesome
It really helped alot. Stacy
at 10:15 why didn't you subtract the exponents 15 and 6?
Thanks , i hope you can uploads more video. i need someone for teach me because final exam was up coming...please. thanks a lot.
How about changing percentages 20%
For the last problem, why wouldn't it initially simplify to y^3/x^-2....the quotient rule is defined as x^a/x^b = x^(a-b)....so wouldn't x^(2-4)= x^-2 ?
im obviosly not understanding this video then
Thank you so much..
what if you are multiplying 2y^4 · 3z · 4z^8y^2 ?
You have a nice writing
great tutorial :)
Do you have a video for exponents to the power of 0
They are always 1
wow loved the video, helped me a lot... ps: just keep pressing 1 for unlimited lolz
Thanks bro for your help
im looking at the videos for the psat tommorow...
what is this problem called? -> (4x^2 - 3x +2) + (5x^2 + 2x-7)
That is a monomial.
Good tutorial but really good handwriting. Wish I could write neat
thanks
i will really go in your website
Thanks so much for this video! I actually understand the concept now! Now maybe I can pass math....... and I totally agree with volleyball9855!
im having trouble with this problem
2b^-1 • 5b^10
nice ring tone XD
OMG!!!!!!! i was replying to The ScooterFanattic...or atleast trying to lol what FAIL, thnx for pointing that out
sir thank q
Are you left-handed?
wait im just starting basic exponents and dont u multiply the base numbers or something.......god i suck with these exponents
Nice
lol you almost have it, (2^3)(2^3) simply equal 2^6, when you multiply two things with the SAME base (in this case the base is 2) then you add the exponents, just like (2^1)(2^1)=2^2, which is just saying 2 times 2 is 2 squared, you don't multiply the bases always leave it as it is
if someone can answer this please answer this soon because i have a test soon how do you solve this (ab^2)(a^2b) please answer soon
I'm only in 6th grade and I'm learning things tht I will hav a hard time on does it get harder!! X_X
Just realized you are left handed
You can't subtract x from y they are variables not numbers
A B C D E F G H I J K L........... today i learn to spell, yippee!
i love you
we.... have different points of view.
in my school phones are banned in class. in CLASS.
he has a website? o_O
i beleive so...
:*
phones should be banned from the classroom :)
In my school phones are banned completely :o!
nvm, just finished the video x_x
Im guessing that was sarcasm because he writes with his left hand on every video.
October 2018 anyone
Hi
hi
that phone
😱😵😨😧😢😡😂😂😁😁
Why am I learning this in 7th grade...
/) i'm also leftie
lefties 4 life
thanks