Math?
Can I use the ray theorem instead of the four-segment theorem? Always use the ray theorem
Can I use the ray theorem instead of the four-segment theorem? Always use the ray theorem
Web: C24 rectangular cross-section Planking: 3-layer board (9/9/9) Taking into account the different moduli of elasticity (web, longitudinal layers 3-Sp, transverse layers 3-Sp)
Hey, can anyone explain to me why this statement is wrong and why all the others are correct? Thanks 🙂
The teacher gives me really difficult assignments, and although I'm still taking the exam so I can get a C, I'm really embarrassed and don't know what to do. So I'm studying with tutors. But then something comes up about Pythagoras, for example, which he never gave us to practice.
Hello, I wanted to ask if I'm allowed to mark my formal collections like this? I know I'm not allowed to write a solution, but I'm sure it's allowed to use a highlighter, right?
Here, for example, are the ingredients of Neurexan 0.6 mg Avena sativa D2 0.6 mg Coffea arabica D12 0.6 mg Passiflora incarnata D2 0.6 mg Zincum isovalerianicum D4 The potencies mean that the original remedy has been diluted, shaken, etc. Is the mg specification based on the original remedy or the diluted substance? So if…
The ray set is a geometric relationship that is often used to find proportions between similar triangles or parts of similar figures. If you want to use the ray set instead of the four-track set, make sure that you correctly apply the corresponding side conditions or length ratios to find the desired sizes.
the same
That’s the same, even if I’ve never heard the word four-way set: https://de.serlo.org/mathe/1971/laserset four-track set
is the same radiation set = four-range set if I have understood it correctly