<p>for 47 I think it was .749=<r=<.751 , because it could have an error of .001, therefore r could be .749</p>
<p>Wow, we almost have all the question on the test, lol.
Only 4 more to go.
Also, for the disk question, a few people are still arguing for C, 1037. Is it most certainly B, and can anyone provide a good explanation? ^^</p>
<p>meatkabob, yeah I would cancel if you know forsure that you got those 5 wrong. 800 is already 90th percentile or something, otherwise I would say that 750+ is good enough xD Good luck next year!</p>
<p>Aquawater:
Yeah, I’ve heard plenty of times that even 800 is already a little below 90th percentile, and a 760/750 would not be looked upon well for college admissions.</p>
<p>If I did cancel and take it in October, would I be able to view my score before sending it to college(s) for EA/ED? I know the deadline is Nov 1st usually, so I don’t know if I would have to send it directly to the college, which would be slightly nerve-wracking.</p>
<p>@masteryster</p>
<p>Did it have both answers because i don’t remember having this dillema for question 47 ?</p>
<p>On the compiled list of answers, what were the questions behind 1, 15, and 38?</p>
<p>It didn’t have both, I am merely correcting the key :P</p>
<p>@aquaman, thanks! I remember now :D</p>
<p>meatkabob, what you can do is take the December one and then get your scores. If you like them, rush it to colleges (you should be able to do it before the deadline for most colleges even after you submit your app), but if you don’t, you can just ignore it, and colleges will never know you took it.</p>
<p>I just looked it up, an 800 is 89th percentile D: oh well, at least it’s not as bad as Chinese.</p>
<p>I thought they based the curve on how well people did though? why don’t they just make a stricter curve :/</p>
<p>FastNeutrino, #1 was something about f(x) = f(x-2)/3 or something like that, and what was the difference b/n f(3) and f(1). Not sure if the function is correct. </p>
<h1>15 had a graph w/ a vert asym of 3, and it asked what value of f(x) would yield 1/g(x) if g(x) was 0, and 1/0 suggests a vert asym of 3, so the answer was 3.</h1>
<h1>38 said that given f(x)=x^x, what does f(x) approach as x approaches 0.</h1>
<p>I got 780+, 800 if I’m really lucky</p>
<p>Hey I know that the answer to the not an integer question was, x/x-1 but I remember one of the choices had only a 5 in the denominator, and the numerator would never be a multiple of 5, anyone else put that as the answer?</p>
<p>Why wouldn’t the numerator ever be a multiple of 5? It depends on what the numerator included in terms of variables.
Actually, I remember that there was another option I was debating over now. Option C, right? I don’t remember what number I put in to test it (maybe it was 12), but when I put in a large enough number, it came out as an integer.</p>
<p>Plus think about it. x/x-1 will never yield an integer if x>2, which was the requirement.</p>
<p>I understand that x/x-1 will never be an integer, I think I put C as well didn’t check large enough numbers I guess.</p>
<p>The curve is predetermined before they administer the test. How bad or well people actually do on it does not determine the curve.</p>
<p>…Really? Where does it say that?</p>
<p>Michael is right.</p>
<p>So… do you guys know if the cutoff was 42 or 43 for this one?</p>