we can only aspire to these individuals, until then you and i are merely nobodies :>Dougie said:for those of us who really can't get close to 120 physically, these guys make it sound easy, hey! wish it was for an average person!
2d use either 2 eqi triagles or (the shitty way which I did) use that OBCA is a parallelogrammojako said:easy question 8
but I didn't or couldn't do Q2 (d) (complex number), Q4 c (conics), Q5 (b) (ii) (probability, and I dont know if I get part (i) right), Q6 b (ii)-(vi), Q7 (a) (i), Q 8 (a) (iii)-(v), Q8 (b) (i), (iii).
Noo.. that adds up to 32 marks!!!
in Q6 (b) (ii), is it meant to be verify B satisfies the equation?
coz I couldnt do it...
i'm just not going to read any suggeted answers or anything like that, i'm here to chat, not remember that exam!!derek_ said:we can only aspire to these individuals, until then you and i are merely nobodies :>
I said that for the two rooms not to be empty, take 2 students and place 1 in each. There are n(n-1) ways of randomly selecting 2 students and 2! ways of putting them into the 2 rooms so neither is empty.fantasia said:also what'd u guys get for the question about n students in two rooms?
I just guessed the first by putting (n+1)Cn.fantasia said:can someone explain the conics question? i completely left that out..
also what'd u guys get for the question about n students in two rooms?
no worries.poshhenry said:THose guy getting in the 100's arnt freaks they just study and do like 5 practice papers. Me only 2 got about 90 reckon out of 120. Hopefully e4. Do you reckon.
same here. part ii) from memory is 3^5 - (3 + 3*2^5) = 144 or something.poshhenry said:for the prop question i said that each person could choose either room. ie 2 arrangements. Since n people than using multiplication law 2^n arragements. But rooms cant be empty. 2 arrangements with a room emty. therefore answer is 2^n-2. I think
i said that there are n-1 combinations the rooms can be filled. 1:n-1, 2 :n-2 .... n-1: 1fantasia said:can someone explain the conics question? i completely left that out..
also what'd u guys get for the question about n students in two rooms?
yeah i got that too!! it seemed liek the logical answer, but now im thinking that their actual positions might be relevant... like sally tom and jeff in room 1 and josh and sophie in room 2 is a DIFFERENT way to sally m and SOPHIE in room 1 and josh and tom in room 2... if u get what i mean :-Srobbie123 said:i said that there are n-1 combinations the rooms can be filled. 1:n-1, 2 :n-2 .... n-1: 1
= n-1 ways
and the students can be arranged in n! ways therfore arrangements are (n-1)n!
prob wrong but who cares cant change it now
lol. thats a 3u problem. its permutation with replacement. formula should be in your books. a^n. a = total number choices, n = how many times you allowed to choose. its 2^n - 2, because there are two ways of having one room emptied, and since both rooms can't be emptied at the same time its -2.robbie123 said:i said that there are n-1 combinations the rooms can be filled. 1:n-1, 2 :n-2 .... n-1: 1
= n-1 ways
and the students can be arranged in n! ways therfore arrangements are (n-1)n!
prob wrong but who cares cant change it now
i only did 2 as well.poshhenry said:THose guy getting in the 100's arnt freaks they just study and do like 5 practice papers. Me only 2 got about 90 reckon out of 120. Hopefully e4. Do you reckon.