asked 28.3k views
0 votes
The length of a rectangle is 3 cm more than 10 times its width. The area of the rectangle is 75 cm2. A quadratic function can be used to represent the dimensions of the rectangle. What quantity of the rectangle represents the domain of that function? A) the area B) the width C) the length Eliminate D) the perimeter

asked
User Shankia
by
7.6k points

2 Answers

3 votes

Answer:

Explanation:

its b i have the same quyeastion

answered
User Barnett
by
8.7k points
0 votes
The way the problem statement is worded, it is likely the quadratic would be written in terms of the width.

Selection B appears to be the appropriate choice.

_____
IMO the problem is worded in a funny way. A domain is usually a set of numbers associated with the independent variable. It appears the question is asking what is the independent variable. Given the relations stated in the problem, it could be either the width or length. It could even be the perimeter, but that is a less convenient choice for solving the rectangle. In other words, arguably any selection except A is correct. (The attachment shows quadratics in terms of width, length, and perimeter.)
The length of a rectangle is 3 cm more than 10 times its width. The area of the rectangle-example-1
answered
User Joe Fletcher
by
7.9k points

No related questions found

Welcome to Qamnty — a place to ask, share, and grow together. Join our community and get real answers from real people.