No, y=x^2 + 2 is a quadratic equation. A linear equation is one in the form y=mx+b. A quadratic has a form y=ax^2+bx+c.
The discriminant is 0.
y = -0.5x plus or minus any number
A graph that has 1 parabolla that has a minimum and 1 positive line.
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y=b+x+x^2 This is a quadratic equation. The graph is a parabola. The quadratic equation formula or factoring can be used to solve this.
It is, as stated, 2x2 + x - 1 = 0. That is the quadratic form.
There are none. For this equation, there is nonreal answer, as the graph of the quadratic does not pass below the x-axis
It is the general form of a quadratic equation.
A quadratic equation.
The first step is to show an example of the quadratic equation in question because the formula given is only the general form of a quadratic equation.
The standard form of the quadratic function in (x - b)2 + c, has a vertex of (b, c). Thus, b is the units shifted to the right of the y-axis, and c is the units shifted above the x-axis.
It is a quadratic equation that has 2 solutions
Quadratic - the degree is two.
It is a quadratic equation.
No.No.No.No.
Yes it is. The thing that makes it a quadratic equation is that "x squared" in there.