D dmathe New member Joined Oct 3, 2020 Messages 1 Oct 3, 2020 #1 Given that x = t + t^2, and y = t + 2t^2, what is the rectangular form of the equation? It's been giving me a bit of trouble, so I'd really appreciate any help I can get. Thank you in advance!
Given that x = t + t^2, and y = t + 2t^2, what is the rectangular form of the equation? It's been giving me a bit of trouble, so I'd really appreciate any help I can get. Thank you in advance!
D Deleted member 4993 Guest Oct 3, 2020 #2 dmathe said: Given that x = t + t^2, and y = t + 2t^2, what is the rectangular form of the equation? It's been giving me a bit of trouble, so I'd really appreciate any help I can get. Thank you in advance! Click to expand... I would start with: y - x = t^2 and y - 2x = -t Please show us what you have tried and exactly where you are stuck. Please follow the rules of posting in this forum, as enunciated at: READ BEFORE POSTING Please share your work/thoughts about this problem.
dmathe said: Given that x = t + t^2, and y = t + 2t^2, what is the rectangular form of the equation? It's been giving me a bit of trouble, so I'd really appreciate any help I can get. Thank you in advance! Click to expand... I would start with: y - x = t^2 and y - 2x = -t Please show us what you have tried and exactly where you are stuck. Please follow the rules of posting in this forum, as enunciated at: READ BEFORE POSTING Please share your work/thoughts about this problem.