ask_math

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A community to ask math questions with the goal of learning math.

When you ask a question, include a description of what you have already tried and where you feel you are stuck.

When answering a question, avoid simply giving the answer.

Let’s not do other people’s homework for them.

Similar communities: For general math news and conversation: https://lemmy.world/c/math

founded 1 year ago
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Ti-84 graphing help (self.ask_math)
submitted 1 year ago by shadowSprite to c/ask_math
 
 

Is there a way to get my TI-84 to not draw the whole line in a graph? For example, if I want to graph a piece work function like f(×) = x+1 for x<2 and x-7 for x>2 can I get it to draw that to easily visualize it, or do I just have to have it draw both full graphs? It would be so much easier for me to see if I could get it to cut off where it needs to.

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What other communities or resources belong in the About tab?

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Ask Math community (self.ask_math)
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by GrabtharsHammer to c/ask_math
 
 

Welcome! This is a community for those that need help with math questions. The idea is for respondents to teach how to solve the problem, not to simply provide an answer. The Original Poster (OP) should aim to attain a real understanding that will lead to independent success in math going forward. Respondents should provide guidance and support to help OP complete the work and learning they need to grow in mathematics.

To get effective help:

Include the complete, exact statement of the problem. Paraphrasing or excerpting the problem can leave out important details.

Include a description of what you have tried, where you feel you are stuck, and ask specific questions about any part of the question you don’t quite understand.

If the problem is part of coursework, specify what course you are taking. If the problem is something you are tackling as part of independent study, provide a basic description of your level of education in math. This will help respondents provide answers that match your level of understanding.

To provide effective help:

Do not provide the answer outright. This doesn’t help the OP grow and learn for themselves.

Do not provide complete, step-by-step solutions. Again, this doesn’t help the OP learn to tackle future problems for themselves.

Do provide a hint about what sorts of questions OP should ask themselves, or suggest special cases or ideas they should consider as they work through the problem. This points out the important features or the problem, but lets OP make the connections for themselves. Learning happens when a student discovers the connections between ideas.

Do look for misunderstandings the OP might labor under, and clarify how those misunderstandings are blocking a solution.

Pitch your answers to meet OP’s stated mathematical level.