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The length of a rectangle was increased by 10 m , the width was increased by 5m ,
as a result the area was increased by 1050 m².
Find the original lenth and width
If you always do what you always did, you'll always get what you always got
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Furthermore...
1) How many solutions to this problem are there?
2) What would the dimensions of a square with the above property be?
Bad speling makes me [sic]
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Why did the vector cross the road?
It wanted to be normal.
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This is a question found in a " pre calculus " book , the authers put 80 m and 60 m as the answers , i could reach one equation in two variables , but never come to a second equation .
Now , if we know that the answer should be 60 m and 80 m , can we work back to find any new equation !!
thanks Dross
thanks mathsyperson
If you always do what you always did, you'll always get what you always got
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2) What would the dimensions of a square with the above property be?
should the original rectangle be a square, or the after the width and height have been increased?
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Dross wrote:2) What would the dimensions of a square with the above property be?
should the original rectangle be a square, or the after the width and height have been increased?
Ah, good question... how about both, just for the practice!
(not at the same time though - two separate questions )
Bad speling makes me [sic]
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if you let the original rectangle be a square:
if you let the result be a square:
Last edited by Kurre (2006-09-28 00:47:46)
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