| ▲ | rogerrogerr 3 hours ago | |||||||||||||
The contrived ones where they make you graph stuff, but that’s about it. | ||||||||||||||
| ▲ | vkou 38 minutes ago | parent [-] | |||||||||||||
There is no graphing problem that you'll be asked to solve before university that can't be plotted to a 'good enough for high school' level by hand in seconds. Four data points is sufficient to give you a 'good enough' shape and position of a second-degree polynomial. Five or six for a third-degree one. (And you barely see them, and don't learn how to algebraically solve for their roots in high school anyways, because the cubic factoring formula is a pig.) If you can't tell what a function's plotted shape is going to be at a glance, you haven't learned the material to the degree expected of an attentive child. | ||||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||||