Message from @thatOneJewishGuy

Discord ID: 802162477508198400


2021-01-22 01:10:04 UTC  

It didnt mention to quote but if you quoted word for word it would have been right

2021-01-22 02:03:10 UTC  

No I didnt quote it didnt ask for it

2021-01-22 02:22:29 UTC  

oh brother I've got an AP US History final tomorrow

2021-01-22 02:22:40 UTC  

I think I should've considered this sooner

2021-01-22 02:25:32 UTC  

<:salut:730846445732888630> good luck

2021-01-22 02:25:45 UTC  

lmao ty ty

2021-01-22 03:35:30 UTC  

Good luck

2021-01-22 03:49:35 UTC  

I’ve got midterms in AP human geography that imma definitely fail

2021-01-22 03:49:46 UTC  

Tomorrow

2021-01-22 04:06:55 UTC  

<:SadPepe:801485397678489660>

2021-01-22 04:07:04 UTC  

life of students are filled with failures

2021-01-22 04:48:23 UTC  

I just cant seem to figure this concept out

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/801170141907386408/802036920129159218/image.png

2021-01-22 04:48:50 UTC  

I can do normal law of sines with 1 traingle

2021-01-22 04:48:56 UTC  

But 2 triangles is a yikes

2021-01-22 05:11:43 UTC  

Law of Sines 🙈

2021-01-22 05:53:03 UTC  

Do most high school history classes use chicago format for bibliography?

2021-01-22 05:57:03 UTC  

I never had to use it in High School

2021-01-22 11:18:22 UTC  

I used MLA

2021-01-22 12:05:56 UTC  

Have any of yall used calculus irl

2021-01-22 13:07:07 UTC  

No, but if you’re an engineer or something like that, you’d use it all the time

2021-01-22 13:07:18 UTC  

It’s also just good to know the concepts

2021-01-22 13:14:25 UTC  

I have never heard o chicago format. In science we use apa and for everything else it is mla

2021-01-22 13:54:44 UTC  

As an intern over the summer I used calculus on an almost daily basis (But that might be because I am a Economics major and had the internship in a related industry) It is really helpful for finding industry surpluses, elasticity and probability given certain constants.

2021-01-22 14:00:43 UTC  

rip

2021-01-22 14:00:48 UTC  

we're reading animal farm in class next

2021-01-22 14:00:48 UTC  

rip

2021-01-22 14:48:39 UTC  

to figure this out. you could have to do SinA/a = SinB/b

2021-01-22 14:49:15 UTC  

since we are finding b, we will isolate b by cross multiplying to get SinA(b) = SinB(a) and than we divide both sides by a to get SinB by itself and the equation is SinB=(b)SinA/a

2021-01-22 14:55:40 UTC  

once we input our values we have SinB = 0.923103246

2021-01-22 14:56:09 UTC  

now we have to Isolate B and to do that we have B = inverse sin(0.923103246)

2021-01-22 14:56:45 UTC  

our angle B is 67 degrees for quardrent 1

2021-01-22 14:57:11 UTC  

to figure out quadrent 2, we simply subtract 180 from theta. this case B

2021-01-22 14:57:59 UTC  

therefore we have 2 B angles. 112 degrees and 67 degrees.

2021-01-22 14:58:18 UTC  

to find the C angle you just have to subtract 180 from angle A and angle B

2021-01-22 14:59:07 UTC  

180-59-67=54 degrees again with our other angle. 180-59-112=9 degrees

2021-01-22 14:59:17 UTC  

@bohemian52983 I took that last year and loved it, good luck and I know you'll do great!

2021-01-22 15:02:23 UTC  

next we just have to use the sine formula but SinA/a = SinC/c and cross multiply and isolate to get SinC(a)/SinA = c and keep in mind the you have to do this twice with 54 degrees and 9 degrees

2021-01-22 15:05:42 UTC  

I used 54 degrees and got a length of 12.2 9 degrees and got 2.3 which is close enough to 2.2 so the actual answer was d

2021-01-22 16:05:03 UTC  

how the hell does this work

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/801170141907386408/802207206710837330/unknown.png

2021-01-22 16:05:26 UTC  

i got 7 but there was no 7

2021-01-22 16:05:58 UTC  

the last answer kills me