Just noticed options 5 and 6 are the same on account of a typo
Ah well people know what it means
Also who was the one who was neither 2014/2013 yet thought 2014 was harder? (Carrot?)
Alternate solution for Q16 (c)
\int \frac{\ln x}{(1+\ln x)^2} \ dx = \int \frac{x\ln x}{x(1+\ln x)^2} dx \\ u = x\ln x \ , \ du = (\ln x + 1) dx \\ dv = \frac{1}{x(1+\ln x)^2} dx \ , \ v = -\frac{1}{1+\ln x}
I might try to look for alternate solutions than Carrot's and post them here
Pick whether you found the 2014 paper harder or easier (separated into categories so we can observe bias)
EDIT: Why won't it let me make a poll? I selected the option when making the thread
Just relax, think clearly, have common sense, do everything properly, if you are looking for band 6 only, prioritize questions that will give you a higher mark/time ratio, otherwise, just gun everything
Good luck!
I honestly thought that this year's exam was easier than last year's, did anyone else feel the same?
Perhaps I'm looking at it through a lens 1 year later, but apart from the Circle Geometry (that I failed miserably), I thought the test was quite doable, no?
Hey, I have made some room for PMs, so if you want to send a private message, go ahead
As for your question, I didn't really use a textbook for 4U, the only textbook I had was the Fitzpatrick one but that's because the school told me to buy it. I never used it after the middle of Complex...
Re: HSC 2014 4U Marathon
\\ $Given$ \ a,b,c \ $are real$ \\ $Show that at least one of the following equations has at least one real root$ \\ \\ x^2 + (a-b)x + (b-c) = 0 \\ x^2 + (b-c)x + (c-a) = 0 \\ x^2 + (c-a)x + (a-b) = 0
With 7th I got 99 in HSC but I don't know my actual raw mark, if its worth anything, after the exam I felt like I lost no marks, so I may have made a couple mistakes (i.e. 2-3 marks lost perhaps)