conversation_id
int64 1
206k
| help_channel
stringlengths 6
7
| __rowid__
stringlengths 32
32
| author_id
stringlengths 17
19
| author_name
stringlengths 6
21
| timestamp
stringlengths 19
19
| content
stringlengths 0
3.97k
| url
stringlengths 0
591
| fileName
stringlengths 0
513
| student
int64 0
1
| helper
int64 0
1
| id
stringlengths 3
19
| name
stringlengths 3
21
| nickname
stringlengths 3
21
| isBot
stringclasses 3
values | __index_level_0__
int64 0
5.45M
|
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
205,781 |
help-1
|
6617d38e40f1474b9732d567a87eab58
|
334482942506041345
|
Mason Hernandez
|
01/30/2022 18:54:36
|
You just told me that if alpha is not the identity then beta is alpha-inverse right? Can alpha and alpha-inverse be disjoint cycles?
| 0 | 1 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,650 |
||
205,781 |
help-1
|
6617d38e40f1474b9732d567a87eab58
|
589206850839379969
|
Madeline Perez
|
01/30/2022 18:55:46
|
Oh no, because if it were, then alpha would have to equal the identity
| 1 | 0 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,651 |
||
205,781 |
help-1
|
6617d38e40f1474b9732d567a87eab58
|
334482942506041345
|
Mason Hernandez
|
01/30/2022 18:56:14
|
so contradiction
| 0 | 1 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,652 |
||
205,781 |
help-1
|
6617d38e40f1474b9732d567a87eab58
|
589206850839379969
|
Madeline Perez
|
01/30/2022 18:56:20
|
Ah alright
| 1 | 0 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,653 |
||
205,781 |
help-1
|
6617d38e40f1474b9732d567a87eab58
|
589206850839379969
|
Madeline Perez
|
01/30/2022 18:56:22
|
Thank you
| 1 | 0 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,654 |
||
205,781 |
help-1
|
6617d38e40f1474b9732d567a87eab58
|
589206850839379969
|
Madeline Perez
|
01/30/2022 18:58:11
|
.close
| 1 | 0 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,655 |
||
205,782 |
help-1
|
0858bb460ccb416fa2ae35a09a57fd18
|
755560502368796672
|
Drew Walker
|
01/30/2022 19:01:38
|
unknown.png
| 1 | 0 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,656 |
||
205,782 |
help-1
|
0858bb460ccb416fa2ae35a09a57fd18
|
755560502368796672
|
Drew Walker
|
01/30/2022 19:02:31
|
can anyone help me understand where sin(a)cos(b) and cos(a)cos(b)
| 1 | 0 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,657 |
||
205,782 |
help-1
|
0858bb460ccb416fa2ae35a09a57fd18
|
755560502368796672
|
Drew Walker
|
01/30/2022 19:05:37
|
comes from
| 1 | 0 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,658 |
||
205,782 |
help-1
|
0858bb460ccb416fa2ae35a09a57fd18
|
872859024985587812
|
Tyler Hill
|
01/30/2022 19:23:11
|
@kenZo are you trying trig identities?
| 0 | 1 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,659 |
||
205,782 |
help-1
|
0858bb460ccb416fa2ae35a09a57fd18
|
872859024985587812
|
Tyler Hill
|
01/30/2022 19:23:30
|
where did you get that picture from?
| 0 | 1 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,660 |
||
205,782 |
help-1
|
0858bb460ccb416fa2ae35a09a57fd18
|
261933205387477002
|
Nicolas Miller
|
01/30/2022 19:24:54
|
Pythagorean theorem. the hypotenuse is cos(B) and you know all the angles
| 0 | 1 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,661 |
||
205,782 |
help-1
|
0858bb460ccb416fa2ae35a09a57fd18
|
261933205387477002
|
Nicolas Miller
|
01/30/2022 19:26:05
|
cos(B) comes from rotating the right triangle with terminal angle B to align its base with the hypotenuse of the triangle of terminal angle A
| 0 | 1 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,662 |
||
205,782 |
help-1
|
0858bb460ccb416fa2ae35a09a57fd18
|
755560502368796672
|
Drew Walker
|
01/30/2022 19:27:14
|
ty
| 1 | 0 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,663 |
||
205,782 |
help-1
|
0858bb460ccb416fa2ae35a09a57fd18
|
755560502368796672
|
Drew Walker
|
01/30/2022 19:28:23
|
I get it now . it was just basic trig functions
| 1 | 0 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,664 |
||
205,782 |
help-1
|
0858bb460ccb416fa2ae35a09a57fd18
|
755560502368796672
|
Drew Walker
|
01/30/2022 19:28:26
|
.close
| 1 | 0 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,665 |
||
205,783 |
help-1
|
cfbb367f71624443926ea9a44fcab404
|
302606524080062465
|
Norman Rodriguez
|
01/30/2022 19:36:56
|
ddd.PNG
| 1 | 0 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,666 |
||
205,783 |
help-1
|
cfbb367f71624443926ea9a44fcab404
|
302606524080062465
|
Norman Rodriguez
|
01/30/2022 19:37:18
|
I keep getting the answer 1 or -1 and both of them are wrong.
| 1 | 0 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,667 |
||
205,783 |
help-1
|
cfbb367f71624443926ea9a44fcab404
|
302606524080062465
|
Norman Rodriguez
|
01/30/2022 19:37:40
|
Because if you use the regular formula for slope it gives 7/7 or 1
| 1 | 0 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,668 |
||
205,783 |
help-1
|
cfbb367f71624443926ea9a44fcab404
|
302606524080062465
|
Norman Rodriguez
|
01/30/2022 19:38:17
|
It does the same backwards as well, but only negative, so -7/-7 or 1 again.
| 1 | 0 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,669 |
||
205,783 |
help-1
|
cfbb367f71624443926ea9a44fcab404
|
714483444394229890
|
Ashton Ramirez
|
01/30/2022 19:38:33
|
wait can you show me how you inputted the numbers into the slope formula
| 0 | 1 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,670 |
||
205,783 |
help-1
|
cfbb367f71624443926ea9a44fcab404
|
302606524080062465
|
Norman Rodriguez
|
01/30/2022 19:39:17
|
sure, it was just 4- -3 / 4- -3
| 1 | 0 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,671 |
||
205,783 |
help-1
|
cfbb367f71624443926ea9a44fcab404
|
302606524080062465
|
Norman Rodriguez
|
01/30/2022 19:39:31
|
the double negatives cancel and youa re left with /7
| 1 | 0 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,672 |
||
205,783 |
help-1
|
cfbb367f71624443926ea9a44fcab404
|
714483444394229890
|
Ashton Ramirez
|
01/30/2022 19:39:32
|
ok so where did you get the 4s from
| 0 | 1 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,673 |
||
205,783 |
help-1
|
cfbb367f71624443926ea9a44fcab404
|
302606524080062465
|
Norman Rodriguez
|
01/30/2022 19:39:34
|
7/7
| 1 | 0 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,674 |
||
205,783 |
help-1
|
cfbb367f71624443926ea9a44fcab404
|
714483444394229890
|
Ashton Ramirez
|
01/30/2022 19:39:41
|
what is f(-3) and what is f(4)
| 0 | 1 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,675 |
||
205,783 |
help-1
|
cfbb367f71624443926ea9a44fcab404
|
302606524080062465
|
Norman Rodriguez
|
01/30/2022 19:39:47
|
the second point
| 1 | 0 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,676 |
||
205,783 |
help-1
|
cfbb367f71624443926ea9a44fcab404
|
714483444394229890
|
Ashton Ramirez
|
01/30/2022 19:40:00
|
yea but what are the values
| 0 | 1 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,677 |
||
205,783 |
help-1
|
cfbb367f71624443926ea9a44fcab404
|
302606524080062465
|
Norman Rodriguez
|
01/30/2022 19:40:06
|
The question states that the Y value is F(x)
| 1 | 0 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,678 |
||
205,783 |
help-1
|
cfbb367f71624443926ea9a44fcab404
|
302606524080062465
|
Norman Rodriguez
|
01/30/2022 19:40:15
|
F(x) being defined later
| 1 | 0 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,679 |
||
205,783 |
help-1
|
cfbb367f71624443926ea9a44fcab404
|
714483444394229890
|
Ashton Ramirez
|
01/30/2022 19:40:37
|
ik what the question states, what are the values of f(-3) and f(4)
| 0 | 1 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,680 |
||
205,783 |
help-1
|
cfbb367f71624443926ea9a44fcab404
|
302606524080062465
|
Norman Rodriguez
|
01/30/2022 19:41:01
|
-3 and -4?
| 1 | 0 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,681 |
||
205,783 |
help-1
|
cfbb367f71624443926ea9a44fcab404
|
302606524080062465
|
Norman Rodriguez
|
01/30/2022 19:41:18
|
wait im trippin
| 1 | 0 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,682 |
||
205,783 |
help-1
|
cfbb367f71624443926ea9a44fcab404
|
302606524080062465
|
Norman Rodriguez
|
01/30/2022 19:41:25
|
its -3 and 4
| 1 | 0 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,683 |
||
205,783 |
help-1
|
cfbb367f71624443926ea9a44fcab404
|
714483444394229890
|
Ashton Ramirez
|
01/30/2022 19:41:31
|
are you sure
| 0 | 1 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,684 |
||
205,783 |
help-1
|
cfbb367f71624443926ea9a44fcab404
|
302606524080062465
|
Norman Rodriguez
|
01/30/2022 19:41:50
|
I'm pretty positve, as i cannot see them being any other value
| 1 | 0 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,685 |
||
205,783 |
help-1
|
cfbb367f71624443926ea9a44fcab404
|
714483444394229890
|
Ashton Ramirez
|
01/30/2022 19:41:52
|
hint: they're not that
| 0 | 1 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,686 |
||
205,783 |
help-1
|
cfbb367f71624443926ea9a44fcab404
|
714483444394229890
|
Ashton Ramirez
|
01/30/2022 19:41:59
|
one of them is wrong
| 0 | 1 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,687 |
||
205,783 |
help-1
|
cfbb367f71624443926ea9a44fcab404
|
302606524080062465
|
Norman Rodriguez
|
01/30/2022 19:42:55
|
would it be -3 and 3?
| 1 | 0 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,688 |
||
205,783 |
help-1
|
cfbb367f71624443926ea9a44fcab404
|
714483444394229890
|
Ashton Ramirez
|
01/30/2022 19:43:00
|
try it
| 0 | 1 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,689 |
||
205,783 |
help-1
|
cfbb367f71624443926ea9a44fcab404
|
302606524080062465
|
Norman Rodriguez
|
01/30/2022 19:43:01
|
looking at the graph at least
| 1 | 0 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,690 |
||
205,783 |
help-1
|
cfbb367f71624443926ea9a44fcab404
|
714483444394229890
|
Ashton Ramirez
|
01/30/2022 19:43:04
|
what is the gradient then
| 0 | 1 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,691 |
||
205,783 |
help-1
|
cfbb367f71624443926ea9a44fcab404
|
302606524080062465
|
Norman Rodriguez
|
01/30/2022 19:43:17
|
the what
| 1 | 0 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,692 |
||
205,783 |
help-1
|
cfbb367f71624443926ea9a44fcab404
|
302606524080062465
|
Norman Rodriguez
|
01/30/2022 19:43:25
|
i'm unsure what you mean
| 1 | 0 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,693 |
||
205,783 |
help-1
|
cfbb367f71624443926ea9a44fcab404
|
714483444394229890
|
Ashton Ramirez
|
01/30/2022 19:43:56
|
now that you have the values
| 0 | 1 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,694 |
||
205,783 |
help-1
|
cfbb367f71624443926ea9a44fcab404
|
714483444394229890
|
Ashton Ramirez
|
01/30/2022 19:44:01
|
put them in the gradient formula
| 0 | 1 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,695 |
||
205,783 |
help-1
|
cfbb367f71624443926ea9a44fcab404
|
714483444394229890
|
Ashton Ramirez
|
01/30/2022 19:44:09
|
same one u used here
| 0 | 1 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,696 |
||
205,783 |
help-1
|
cfbb367f71624443926ea9a44fcab404
|
714483444394229890
|
Ashton Ramirez
|
01/30/2022 19:44:16
|
or slope formula whatever
| 0 | 1 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,697 |
||
205,783 |
help-1
|
cfbb367f71624443926ea9a44fcab404
|
302606524080062465
|
Norman Rodriguez
|
01/30/2022 19:44:42
|
so I got 7/6
| 1 | 0 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,698 |
||
205,783 |
help-1
|
cfbb367f71624443926ea9a44fcab404
|
302606524080062465
|
Norman Rodriguez
|
01/30/2022 19:44:54
|
seems wrong but I'm going to try it
| 1 | 0 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,699 |
||
205,783 |
help-1
|
cfbb367f71624443926ea9a44fcab404
|
302606524080062465
|
Norman Rodriguez
|
01/30/2022 19:45:13
|
wrong. 2 attempts left
| 1 | 0 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,700 |
||
205,783 |
help-1
|
cfbb367f71624443926ea9a44fcab404
|
714483444394229890
|
Ashton Ramirez
|
01/30/2022 19:45:14
|
show how you put the numbers
| 0 | 1 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,701 |
||
205,783 |
help-1
|
cfbb367f71624443926ea9a44fcab404
|
302606524080062465
|
Norman Rodriguez
|
01/30/2022 19:45:43
|
sss.png
| 1 | 0 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,702 |
||
205,783 |
help-1
|
cfbb367f71624443926ea9a44fcab404
|
302606524080062465
|
Norman Rodriguez
|
01/30/2022 19:45:54
|
i'm drawing on mouse, disregard the quality lol
| 1 | 0 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,703 |
||
205,783 |
help-1
|
cfbb367f71624443926ea9a44fcab404
|
714483444394229890
|
Ashton Ramirez
|
01/30/2022 19:45:54
|
slope = $\frac{f(4) -f(-3)}{4- -3}$
| 0 | 1 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,704 |
||
205,783 |
help-1
|
cfbb367f71624443926ea9a44fcab404
|
714483444394229890
|
Ashton Ramirez
|
01/30/2022 19:46:35
|
did you get the a's and b's mixed up?
| 0 | 1 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,705 |
||
205,783 |
help-1
|
cfbb367f71624443926ea9a44fcab404
|
302606524080062465
|
Norman Rodriguez
|
01/30/2022 19:46:50
|
I think I did
| 1 | 0 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,706 |
||
205,783 |
help-1
|
cfbb367f71624443926ea9a44fcab404
|
302606524080062465
|
Norman Rodriguez
|
01/30/2022 19:47:02
|
So it's 6/7?
| 1 | 0 |
106154012163743744
|
Valentina Johnson
|
Valentina Johnson
|
False
| 5,447,707 |
||
205,783 |
help-1
|
cfbb367f71624443926ea9a44fcab404
|
302606524080062465
|
Norman Rodriguez
|
01/30/2022 19:47:19
|
because f(4) is 3
| 1 | 0 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,708 |
||
205,783 |
help-1
|
cfbb367f71624443926ea9a44fcab404
|
714483444394229890
|
Ashton Ramirez
|
01/30/2022 19:47:26
|
try it
| 0 | 1 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,709 |
||
205,783 |
help-1
|
cfbb367f71624443926ea9a44fcab404
|
302606524080062465
|
Norman Rodriguez
|
01/30/2022 19:47:32
|
and f(-3) is -3
| 1 | 0 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,710 |
||
205,783 |
help-1
|
cfbb367f71624443926ea9a44fcab404
|
714483444394229890
|
Ashton Ramirez
|
01/30/2022 19:47:49
|
if you think it's right then try it
| 0 | 1 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,711 |
||
205,783 |
help-1
|
cfbb367f71624443926ea9a44fcab404
|
302606524080062465
|
Norman Rodriguez
|
01/30/2022 19:47:57
|
It was correct!
| 1 | 0 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,712 |
||
205,783 |
help-1
|
cfbb367f71624443926ea9a44fcab404
|
302606524080062465
|
Norman Rodriguez
|
01/30/2022 19:48:00
|
Thanks!
| 1 | 0 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,713 |
||
205,783 |
help-1
|
cfbb367f71624443926ea9a44fcab404
|
302606524080062465
|
Norman Rodriguez
|
01/30/2022 19:55:01
|
.close
| 1 | 0 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,714 |
||
205,784 |
help-1
|
959ae0ae2bcf46e18907fa0dbc0d63da
|
714366697422716929
|
Aaliyah Ramirez
|
01/30/2022 19:55:57
|
can someone help me solve this
| 1 | 0 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,715 |
||
205,784 |
help-1
|
959ae0ae2bcf46e18907fa0dbc0d63da
|
714366697422716929
|
Aaliyah Ramirez
|
01/30/2022 19:56:11
|
20220131_085606.jpg
| 1 | 0 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,716 |
||
205,784 |
help-1
|
959ae0ae2bcf46e18907fa0dbc0d63da
|
800622149903056927
|
River King
|
01/30/2022 20:00:18
|
For this question, think about end behavior.
| 0 | 1 |
837112865580253204
|
Carol Torres
|
Carol Torres
|
False
| 5,447,717 |
||
205,784 |
help-1
|
959ae0ae2bcf46e18907fa0dbc0d63da
|
800622149903056927
|
River King
|
01/30/2022 20:00:20
|
@zeze
| 0 | 1 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,718 |
||
205,784 |
help-1
|
959ae0ae2bcf46e18907fa0dbc0d63da
|
800622149903056927
|
River King
|
01/30/2022 20:00:39
|
What do e^(-4x) and e^(4x) approach as x -> ∞?
| 0 | 1 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,719 |
||
205,784 |
help-1
|
959ae0ae2bcf46e18907fa0dbc0d63da
|
714366697422716929
|
Aaliyah Ramirez
|
01/30/2022 20:01:21
|
I'm sorry I couldn't understand
| 1 | 0 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,720 |
||
205,784 |
help-1
|
959ae0ae2bcf46e18907fa0dbc0d63da
|
800622149903056927
|
River King
|
01/30/2022 20:05:13
|
As x gets larger and larger (infinitely large), what do $e^{4x}$ and $e^{-4x}$ approach?
| 0 | 1 |
859220796966567937
|
Glenn Nguyen
|
Glenn Nguyen
|
False
| 5,447,721 |
||
205,784 |
help-1
|
959ae0ae2bcf46e18907fa0dbc0d63da
|
800622149903056927
|
River King
|
01/30/2022 20:05:31
|
Another way you can think about this limit is identifying what terms "dominate" the limit
| 0 | 1 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,722 |
||
205,785 |
help-1
|
a7b9441d13b9494d91e6b0d999db42b8
|
912228383860097034
|
Morgan Green
|
01/30/2022 20:33:34
|
unknown.png
| 1 | 0 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,723 |
||
205,785 |
help-1
|
a7b9441d13b9494d91e6b0d999db42b8
|
912228383860097034
|
Morgan Green
|
01/30/2022 20:33:40
|
Helpp
| 1 | 0 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,724 |
||
205,785 |
help-1
|
a7b9441d13b9494d91e6b0d999db42b8
|
912228383860097034
|
Morgan Green
|
01/30/2022 20:33:51
|
Idk how to answer this type of questions
| 1 | 0 |
859220796966567937
|
Glenn Nguyen
|
Glenn Nguyen
|
False
| 5,447,725 |
||
205,786 |
help-1
|
17d6913f2e95405e899685881bd5cc3a
|
169238160952393746
|
Kayla Brown
|
01/30/2022 21:21:57
|
unknown.png
| 1 | 0 |
859220796966567937
|
Glenn Nguyen
|
Glenn Nguyen
|
False
| 5,447,726 |
||
205,786 |
help-1
|
17d6913f2e95405e899685881bd5cc3a
|
169238160952393746
|
Kayla Brown
|
01/30/2022 21:28:53
|
97-43=54
| 1 | 0 |
837112865580253204
|
Carol Torres
|
Carol Torres
|
False
| 5,447,727 |
||
205,786 |
help-1
|
17d6913f2e95405e899685881bd5cc3a
|
169238160952393746
|
Kayla Brown
|
01/30/2022 21:29:02
|
is it simply 10^54
| 1 | 0 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,728 |
||
205,786 |
help-1
|
17d6913f2e95405e899685881bd5cc3a
|
169238160952393746
|
Kayla Brown
|
01/30/2022 21:29:02
|
?
| 1 | 0 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,729 |
||
205,786 |
help-1
|
17d6913f2e95405e899685881bd5cc3a
|
169238160952393746
|
Kayla Brown
|
01/30/2022 21:30:18
|
@Helpers
| 1 | 0 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,730 |
||
205,786 |
help-1
|
17d6913f2e95405e899685881bd5cc3a
|
169238160952393746
|
Kayla Brown
|
01/30/2022 21:44:06
|
@Helpers
| 1 | 0 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,731 |
||
205,786 |
help-1
|
17d6913f2e95405e899685881bd5cc3a
|
481266434635202581
|
Jacquelyn Taylor
|
01/30/2022 21:48:25
|
what
| 0 | 1 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,732 |
||
205,786 |
help-1
|
17d6913f2e95405e899685881bd5cc3a
|
169238160952393746
|
Kayla Brown
|
01/30/2022 21:58:22
|
.close
| 1 | 0 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,733 |
||
205,787 |
help-1
|
7871f668939747c989140da91e970cdc
|
657219869598547978
|
Sharon Harris
|
12/23/2021 17:46:10
|
I’m confused on how to incorporate the MVT
| 1 | 0 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,734 |
||
205,787 |
help-1
|
7871f668939747c989140da91e970cdc
|
456226577798135808
|
Don Thomas
|
12/23/2021 17:49:19
|
do you know what the MVT is?
| 0 | 1 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,735 |
||
205,787 |
help-1
|
7871f668939747c989140da91e970cdc
|
456226577798135808
|
Don Thomas
|
12/23/2021 17:49:30
|
@Misty
| 0 | 1 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,736 |
||
205,787 |
help-1
|
7871f668939747c989140da91e970cdc
|
456226577798135808
|
Don Thomas
|
12/23/2021 17:52:52
|
the mvt states that if a function is continuous on the closed interval [a,b] (**using [] not () to signify closed**), and differentiable on the open interval (**using () not [] to signify open**), then there will be at least 1 point at x=c where f'(c) is equal to the average rate of change across the interval
| 0 | 1 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,737 |
||
205,787 |
help-1
|
7871f668939747c989140da91e970cdc
|
657219869598547978
|
Sharon Harris
|
12/23/2021 17:53:17
|
I’m thinking
| 1 | 0 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,738 |
||
205,787 |
help-1
|
7871f668939747c989140da91e970cdc
|
456226577798135808
|
Don Thomas
|
12/23/2021 17:53:18
|
the average rate of change is shown to be the slope of that longer dotted line from f(0) to f(12)
| 0 | 1 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,739 |
||
205,787 |
help-1
|
7871f668939747c989140da91e970cdc
|
657219869598547978
|
Sharon Harris
|
12/23/2021 17:53:29
|
Yes I follow
| 1 | 0 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,740 |
||
205,787 |
help-1
|
7871f668939747c989140da91e970cdc
|
456226577798135808
|
Don Thomas
|
12/23/2021 17:53:39
|
so we need to find the points inside the interval where f'(c) equals that slope
| 0 | 1 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,741 |
||
205,787 |
help-1
|
7871f668939747c989140da91e970cdc
|
657219869598547978
|
Sharon Harris
|
12/23/2021 17:54:06
|
Ok
| 1 | 0 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,742 |
||
205,787 |
help-1
|
7871f668939747c989140da91e970cdc
|
456226577798135808
|
Don Thomas
|
12/23/2021 17:54:17
|
im not great at drawing but here is a visualization i found
| 0 | 1 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,743 |
||
205,787 |
help-1
|
7871f668939747c989140da91e970cdc
|
456226577798135808
|
Don Thomas
|
12/23/2021 17:54:37
|
15d246802c3faf8e0d09a6ecf3eac5c74c72626f.png
| 0 | 1 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,744 |
||
205,787 |
help-1
|
7871f668939747c989140da91e970cdc
|
456226577798135808
|
Don Thomas
|
12/23/2021 17:55:00
|
the point tangent to the pink line is what we're looking for if the green line is the AROC (average rate of change)
| 0 | 1 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,745 |
||
205,787 |
help-1
|
7871f668939747c989140da91e970cdc
|
249627068046901248
|
Anthony Miller
|
12/23/2021 19:55:14
|
unknown.png
| 0 | 1 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,746 |
||
205,787 |
help-1
|
7871f668939747c989140da91e970cdc
|
249627068046901248
|
Anthony Miller
|
12/23/2021 19:55:23
|
I need help with this change of variables
| 0 | 1 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,747 |
||
205,787 |
help-1
|
7871f668939747c989140da91e970cdc
|
249627068046901248
|
Anthony Miller
|
12/23/2021 19:55:38
|
I was working on some example but wanted the actual solution to the answer
| 0 | 1 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,748 |
||
205,787 |
help-1
|
7871f668939747c989140da91e970cdc
|
249627068046901248
|
Anthony Miller
|
12/23/2021 19:57:48
|
specifically the last section
| 0 | 1 |
nan
|
nan
|
nan
|
nan
| 5,447,749 |
Subsets and Splits
No community queries yet
The top public SQL queries from the community will appear here once available.