How do I shift thw following problem 3 units right?sqrt(3x-x^2)
8/26/2007 11:21:07 PM
Ask you question again and make sure it makes sense.
8/26/2007 11:50:09 PM
On a coordinate graph, how do I shift that graph 3 units to the right? I know I must subtract 3 somewhere in the equation.
8/26/2007 11:53:36 PM
replace x with x-3. For example, y=x goes through the x-axis at x=0, but y=x-3 goes through the x-axis at x=3. Apply this to your function.
8/27/2007 12:02:07 AM
replace x with (x-3) in all places. the ( )'s dont matter in the above example but in your specific question they will.y= 3(x-3) - (x-3)^2 .
8/27/2007 12:23:56 AM
Thanks
8/27/2007 12:36:24 AM
isn't 141 calculus?
8/28/2007 11:45:32 AM
yeah, but they probably review precal at the beginning
8/28/2007 1:18:36 PM
good luck when it gets to the hard stuff
8/28/2007 1:40:57 PM
^Pfff the only thing you have to be able to remember from calc is derivatives, integrals, and differential equations.
8/28/2007 3:12:14 PM
^^Calc 1 is a cake walk
8/28/2007 5:20:39 PM
oh man, this was stuff i did in high school, ive almost completely forgotten how to do it
8/30/2007 3:44:46 AM
<insert elitist study hall shit about how ____ course is a cake walk>[Edited on August 30, 2007 at 5:45 PM. Reason : .]
8/30/2007 5:45:36 PM
heck, every I need to know I learned in Kindergarten, what's your problem
8/30/2007 8:51:41 PM