Leonhard Euler developed this method in his article, "De aequationibus differentialibus, quae certis tantum casibus integrationem admittunt (On differential equations which sometimes can be integrated)," published in 1747.
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The method is the same.
It is difficult to answer the question because the second point is indeterminate: it could be (1, 18) or (11, 8).
It depends on your level of expertise. The simplest method is to invert the matrix of coefficients.
Its a method used to find out the common solution of a pair of linear equations in two variables. For it, just make the coefficients of any one term and if the coefficients are having same signs, subtract both and if they are having different signs, add them up.
this questions isn't specified enough to be answered
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The method is the same.
It is difficult to answer the question because the second point is indeterminate: it could be (1, 18) or (11, 8).
The method is exactly the same.
It depends on your level of expertise. The simplest method is to invert the matrix of coefficients.
Its a method used to find out the common solution of a pair of linear equations in two variables. For it, just make the coefficients of any one term and if the coefficients are having same signs, subtract both and if they are having different signs, add them up.
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True
Eisner Hewer invented traditional method in math
Henry Ford invented the assembly-line method of production