It is not the responsibility of the volunteers to try to go find your homework, figure out what the question was, decipher what you've done, and then type it out for you here.humakhan said:ok cant you copy the link and paste on url and press enter then it might come up.
Or (and I'm making many assumptions here, because you did not include any instructions or descriptions):Click here to see the image. Warning: This is a 261-kilobyte file!
Let A, B, and C be three parallel lines, and D be a transversal. (So we're looking at the same picture, draw A, B, and C horizontal, and D slanty from upper-left to lower-right.) Let E be perpendicular to A, B, and C (and draw it to the left of D). The following is, roughly speaking, the picture I'm looking at in my book:
The expressions "10", "a + 5", "12", and "a + 2" refer to the lengths of the segments between A and B, and between B and C, along the lines E and D.Code:E D | \ A ------|----\----------- a + 5 | \ a + 2 B ------|------\--------- 10 | \ 12 C ------|--------\-------
I need to solve for the value of "a". Here is my work....
You do realize that "a = -20" means that the length of the first segment is -15 and the length of the longer segment is the smaller value -18, right? The "solution" gives physically meaningless values, and gives a smaller value for a longer length.humakhan said:it comes out right