<p>^No. The question was asking which shape would let you have the most interconnected lines regardless of where the dots were placed; the pentagon could have 2 lines, whereas the circle always had 4.</p>
<p>was the last one 10(1.12)^t</p>
<p>^Yes it was.</p>
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</p>
<p>I’m slow, and maybe I misunderstood the question, but I think you’re arguing that if you put the points on the vertices, you’d only be able to draw 2 lines. Why is one limited to two? Can’t one draw diagonal lines?</p>
<p>was the circle equation</p>
<p>(x+3)^2+(y-4)^2=64</p>
<p>^Since the question was asking which figure would always have the most lines, the pentagon is eliminated if you can make one configuration where you cannot not draw 4 lines.</p>
<p>Slurpee it was (x+3)</p>
<p>I believe the last one was 10(.12)^t
1.12 isn’t 12% its 112%</p>
<p>Circle is right…</p>
<p>**** got that one wrong…</p>
<p>^No UVA, it is 1.12. Check the math.</p>
<p>Slurpee, I think it was (x+3)^2 + (y-4)^2, since the center was at (-3,4)?</p>
<p>I picked 10(1.12)^t; I remebered Total = principal (1+percent/100)^time</p>
<p>ya I meant x+3 lemme edit</p>
<p>I got a 780 on the SATs in…May of 2010? I only got 1 answer wrong, and I just marked wrong. (I put C instead of D or vice versa) I am in AP Calculus AB, we just got back our first test, I got the only A in the class (I only missed half a point, I forgot to put parentheses around an ordered pair, darn it) with a 98.9% or something, with something like a combined 7 D’s and F’s. So all in all, I’m pretty darn good at math (for Reading/English/Writing, I can’t say the same) and I thought that the September 2010 ACT Math was incredibly easy, I probably got a perfect or close to a perfect on it. However, me saying it was incredibly easy probably doesn’t mean much to your average math student. The two problems that gave me trouble were the ‘where does the 1 kid live in relationship to the school’ I overcomplicated it and was solving for right triangles, slope of lines, etc but eventually got 1 west 1 north. The other one I don’t remember but in the end I got the correct answer (I think) </p>
<p>Oh and by the way, I put circle because it said geometric figure.</p>
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<p>That’s my problem. I’m not understanding your example of point placement where you couldn’t draw 4 lines. =/</p>
<p>Violin, it was the oposite of whatever the points it gave you. your right</p>
<p>^Thanks for that great anecdote; I got 1 west and 1 north as well.</p>
<p>What was the one with two parallel lines, and a triangle in between them? I don’t remember much, but one angle measure was 70, and it asked you to find the measure of y?</p>
<p>typo meant x+3… </p>
<p>25th in the sequence had 51 boxes?</p>
<p>-.
. .
. .</p>
<p>If the dots were on the vertices.</p>
<p>Iphonehacker, it was 46 degrees.</p>
<p>^Agreed slurpee</p>
<p>What was the answer to the one where it asked whats the longest side (You had to use distance formula i think) on the triangle on the coordinate plane.</p>
<p>correct. Does anybody remember the 480 page book question?</p>