The simplest, of infinitely many possible answers is
Un = 3n + 3
The rule is 10
There are infinitely many possible options. It could, for example, be n to -0.1n5 + n4 - 3.5n3 + 5n2 + 0.6n + 3 for n = 0, 1, 2, ... The simplest, though is n to 3(n + 1)
12-15
Well you can use the rule to fill in the questionsLike x=5 and your answer y=15 the rule for this is multiply by 5
Table for 12 - 2009 Chocolate Vacation 2-12 was released on: USA: 15 December 2009
For a linear sequence (same differences) look for the difference first. E.g.7, 11, 15, 19 ...This has a difference of 4 so the first part of the rule is 4n. (the rule follows the 4 times table)Now compare the sequence to the 4 times table7, 11, 15, 19 ...4, 8, 12, 16 ...Out sequence is always 3 larger than the four times table so we adjust our rule by adding 3. So our final rule is 4n + 3.
3, 6, 9, 12, 15.As in the three times table.
There are many possibilities, but the simplest answer is y = 10 - x
university time table(IT) ss-1/12/2008 sdc-5/12/2008 nt-10/12/2008 ds-12/12/2008 cs-15/12/2008
The Captain's Table - 1959 is rated/received certificates of: Australia:G Finland:K-12 Netherlands:14 (orginal rating) Sweden:15
I assume we are talking single-valued functions. If this is the case, any table with values for the function, you just have to look at the inputs to make sure two of them are not the same (in elementary algebra classes this is referred to as the "Vertical Line Test"). For example, say we have a table of numbers x and y: x | y ------ 10|15 12|15 This is a function because all the x values are different. Likewise we can say that were the table: x | y ------ 15|10 15|12 it would not be a function because we have multiple outputs originating from a single input.
About 15 years is it has no table scraps if so then it will die at about! the ago of 10 to 12.