i mean "the formula describing the thing being summed"
"general term" is the opposite of "specific term". one specific term is 28-4. the next specific term is 28-8. the next is 28-12. the way to describe all of these in general is "28-4i"
remember, n is just a stand-in for a number. you would know what to do if someone gave you a number (if i asked "what's the millionth term?", say) - so just do that, but with n instead!
Nah. Makes it harder to hit me if I'm further away
If I'm melee, then I figured he just has disadvantage trying to hit me, but if I'm far away, not only does he have disadvantage but he also has to locate where I'm at
I give my location away by attacking, but don't think I'll be just staying in one place
Btw how are you going to have Varlan guess my location (if he even wants to bother fighting me Ig)
"I have a spell for that," Raji says, and does a dismissive flick of his hand. A tiny, floating eye appears, and hovers alongside the wagon. "We'll be fine. It'll make a noise if it sees anyone coming."
Cantrips seem to be the only type of spell that cares only about your class level.
However, in the multiclassing section they are not mentioned, does this mean that cantrips use your character level, instead of your class level?
Does this mean a Warlock 2 / Fighter 15 can cast an Eldritch Blast ...
you want to make 17/(r²-r) as small as possible, right?
to make a small fraction, you want a small numerator and a large denominator. you can't change the top of this fraction, so you want to make the bottom as big as possible
Hm, I'm solving a lot of these concepts in a way that makes sense but not the way my teacher did it and I'm a bit worried
So this one
We have a+ar+ar^2 + etc =7
But we also have ar+(ar^3)+(ar^5)+etc=3
So my immediate thought process was to take an r out which makes r(a+(ar^2)+(ar^4)+etc)=3
And my first brain process was, "Well, if all of the odd terms equal three, and I just manipulated the equation, giving myself all the even terms, that means that the even terms must be four! And then I was like r has to be a number that turns the 4 of all the even terms into three
As in
a+(ar^2)+(ar^4)+etc=4, but r(a+(ar^2)+(ar^4)+etc)=3
And then I messed up basic math and solved r as 4/3 and I was like hm
4/3 is greater than one, so I guess my assumption was wrong
method two:
r(a+(ar^2)+(ar^4)+etc)=3 a+(ar^2)+(ar^4)+etc=3/r a+(ar^2)+(ar^4)+etc+ ar+(ar^3)+(ar^5)+etc=7 That means 3+3/r=7
Math the rest and then you get 3/4
And then I realized back that my assumption of the even terms adding up to four was indeed correct and smacked my forehead
But I like method two better anyways, I wasn't confident that the even terms actually added up to four
(Thanks math induction for teaching me short cuts!)
honestly i think the way you did it with "all the even terms add to 4, and if you multiply the even terms by r you get the odd terms" is how i would do it
your logic makes sense and is mathematically sound, and you got the correct answer. there's no need to do things in the exact same way your teacher did - you're fine
you're learning how to do more complicated problems where there are many different approaches - it's not just "here's a bunch of formulas, here's where you use those formulas" anymore
as long as your approach makes sense and leads you to the right answer, you're 100% okay