why wouldn't you be able to?P.S. Can you take the discriminant of a discriminant?
Wouldnt it be possible to not complete the square and just state the conclusion??
i think so yeah, because even if m is negative, m^2 is greater than m when m is greater than one, less than negative one, and when it's between 1 & -1, the addition of four will cancel any negative out anyway.Wouldnt it be possible to not complete the square and just state the conclusion??
but u have to show that.i think so yeah, because even if m is negative, m^2 is greater than m when m is greater than one, less than negative one, and when it's between 1 & -1, the addition of four will cancel any negative out anyway.
because it is.but u have to show that.
how can u be so sure
OO... I get it. By completing the square, its saying that it cant be negative. I c...but u have to show that.
how can u be so sure
HSC markers will probably not pay you full marks for that though.because it is.
Bahaha, +1 !dammit, wrong thread
Bahaha, +1 !