<p>I think the remainder was 2</p>
<p>Could someone explain the the three circle problem (1r, 1/2r,1/3r), and the like 40% of men voted, and the answer was like 20,000?</p>
<p>Gracias!</p>
<p>Edit: I see the pi one right above me, good work anticipating my post.</p>
<p>^^ But why two?</p>
<p>For the 40% of men one, I divided 12,000 by .60 (women) to get the 20,000.</p>
<p>The circles with the radii doesn’t equal 6/11? I swear I’m correct:</p>
<p>pi r^2= pi
sq(r)= sq (1)
r=1</p>
<p>x= 6/11 = .55
x/2= .55/2= .28
x/3= .55/3 = .18</p>
<p>add them all up= 1.01 = 1</p>
<p>was the line translated one experiemental … the one evryone is saying is (-4, -3)</p>
<p>I got radical 3
It had 2 trangles
1 with 2 sides of length 1 which was 45 45 90
so the hypoteneus was 1rad2
and the leg of the other one was 1
so 1rad 2 square + 1 squared = Csquared
1 rad 2 square = 2 and 1 squared = 1
root of 2+1 = rad 3
so the hypotenues of the second triangle was rad 3
AM I WRONG???
HOLY SHYYT WHY ARE PPL SAYING ITS 3RAD2 or 2RAD3</p>
<p>May I ask why you divide by .6? Couldn’t you just do a ratio or something?</p>
<p>did EVERYone get the one that was asking about the entire surface area of a cube and tapesss???</p>
<p>can someone tell me the grid in question that had the answer 36?</p>
<p>12n is how different from 12(n-3)?</p>
<p>^Wasn’t it 24?</p>
<p>36, actually</p>
<p>12n
12(n-3) = 12n - 36</p>
<p>12n - (12n - 36) = 36
therefore one is 36 greater than the other</p>
<p>does anyone have the exact prompt for the uphill and downhill problem ?</p>
<p>for the uphill downhill one, does anyone remember what letter the answer was?</p>
<p>How the heck did you guys get 333/666/667 for the problem about numbers less than 1000 that are divisible by 3?</p>
<p>You’re obviously correct, because I seem to be the only one who got 300 for that. Now I feel stupid…</p>
<p>And I got 6/7. I thought someone confirmed that a few pages back. I even posted the actual problem.</p>
<p>Why was the tree formula y=5x+20?</p>
<p>I put the same window in my graphing calculator and graphed all the equations. y=5x + 20 was the only one that came close.</p>
<p>anybody sending an ambiguous question to collegeboard for the one about the closest distance between point T and a line?</p>
<p>^got that too</p>
<p>
</p>
<p>It wasn’t ambiguous… It was elementary maths! Answer was 4</p>