Help with Exponent Simplification: 2^((2x^2)-x)+1

JSUJosh

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Sep 30, 2015
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I can't quite figure out what to do to this problem.


2^((2x^2)-x)+1

Edit: I am indeed stuck at the beginning, sorry I forgot to mention that.
 
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I can't quite figure out what to do to this problem.
You included no instructions within your post. Does the subject line perhaps include a hint? (Subject lines frequently don't relate, is why I ask.) Are you supposed to be simplifying something?

2^((2x^2)-x)+1
What you have posted means the following:

. . . . .\(\displaystyle 2^{2x^2\, -\, x}\, +\, 1\)

I see no particular "simplification" which can be done with this.

I am indeed stuck at the beginning
Please reply with specifications as to what that "beginning" is, so we can begin to provide you with lesson links. Thank you! ;)
 
You included no instructions within your post. Does the subject line perhaps include a hint? (Subject lines frequently don't relate, is why I ask.) Are you supposed to be simplifying something?


What you have posted means the following:

. . . . .\(\displaystyle 2^{2x^2\, -\, x}\, +\, 1\)

I see no particular "simplification" which can be done with this.


Please reply with specifications as to what that "beginning" is, so we can begin to provide you with lesson links. Thank you! ;)

Well you pretty much just said what my teacher was supposed to be asking haha. He accidently assigned that problem to the test without looking at it. It can't be simplified anymore, and he had told us that all of our problems were able to be simplified. Hence, the main reason I was confused. But thank you for your time!
 
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