Thanks man! I get it now Except I don't get the last step kind of, since I haven't learned radians :L
Similarly you can work out for t = -5
180 degrees = π (pi)Thanks man! I get it now Except I don't get the last step kind of, since I haven't learned radians :L
Yeah I would have probably used auxiliary method but the question did specify using the t formula.You can also use the auxiliary angle method unless the question specifies t formula
Thanks man! I get it now Except I don't get the last step kind of, since I haven't learned radians :L
tut tut, forgot to test for theta=180
Similarly you can work out for t = -5
Oh dear. Must retire from tutoring!tut tut, forgot to test for theta=180
In all honesty Drongoski, I think the whole idea of "Showing that you test 180 or else you lose marks" is very silly. It can very be easily seen and instead of deducting perfectly good students for it, the Examination Committee could simply include questions where 180 is indeed a solution, and those who don't check it get penalised for missing it out, as opposed to just penalising people for not actually writing it down when it can trivially be seen by simple inspection.Oh dear. Must retire from tutoring!