simpleetal
Member
- Joined
- Apr 6, 2015
- Messages
- 54
- Gender
- Male
- HSC
- 2016
Re: HSC 2015 4U Marathon - Advanced Level
Lol, to be fair these people haven't encountered situations where mathematical rigor is of great importance... I do have a rigorous solution, which I can post if requested perhaps tomorrow.so ur argument is, if g (x)=x (non zero factor) +h (y) =0, then these zeroes occur only when x=0 and h (y) =0? This is clearly not true, and both of yours + soccerball's solutions wouldn't get more than 1 mark in the actual exam!
You mean whether your solution is 100% valid? No. But I suppose it would take someone like Glitter or Sy or etc. to truly convince youFor my proof im essentially proving when both sides are zero what values work. And since theres an extra x^3 it wont work any other way unless theyre both zero...
EDIT: Would that be "legit" enough as a proof