Count up or down
its hard but i think you can look in a book and find out
What is the difference between output and input?If you sing into a microphone you can hear the microphone's output.Sound coming out of the power amp to the speakers.That is the input of the loudspeaker.Do you see the difference?Your voice is the microphone's input. Its output is electrical impulses that are input to the amplifier. The amplified impulses are the output of the amplifier and input to the speaker. Sound waves are output of the speaker and input to your ears.
No, I am not an output in math.
It is the process which converts the input to output.
The input means the problem and the output means the answer! [but not in math]
If you use an input output table, domain is the input.
if one answer is 6 and the other answer is 7, how do the output numbers from the input/output machines compare
Count up or down
Efficiency = Output/Input.
The rule of a function in math is what relates the input value to the output value. For example, if f(x) = x2, the "function rule" is to square the input value to get the output value.
its hard but i think you can look in a book and find out
A table in which you put in a number and out comes another number. Usually more than one groups of numbers. And almost ALWAYS follows a rule such as: Input x3=Output or Input -23= Output Input | Output 2 | 4 10 | 20 16 | 32 In this table you can see that the rule is Input x2 = Output Hope This helped!
input
Assuming by in you mean input and out you mean output. Input is the value that goes in while the output is the value you receive. Between these terms is a rule, called the nth term that will always work to help you find the input/output. For example. Our input is 2, and our output is 10 the rule here could be the input multiplied by 5 equals the output, or it can be something extremely difficult and unfathomable even to a banker...
Input is things like mice or keyboards. Output would be a monitor or printer.
What is the difference between output and input?If you sing into a microphone you can hear the microphone's output.Sound coming out of the power amp to the speakers.That is the input of the loudspeaker.Do you see the difference?Your voice is the microphone's input. Its output is electrical impulses that are input to the amplifier. The amplified impulses are the output of the amplifier and input to the speaker. Sound waves are output of the speaker and input to your ears.