0 Celsius equals 32 Fahrenheit
f(x)=1 f'(x)=0 because the derivative of a constant is ALWAYS 0.
Yes.
It means the value of the function equals zero when the argument is 4. For example: f(x)=x-4 f(4)=4-4=0
If you mean 5 times 0 then it equals to 0
0 Celsius equals 32 Fahrenheit
f(x)=1 f'(x)=0 because the derivative of a constant is ALWAYS 0.
Yes.
0 degrees Fahrenheit is equal to -17.78 degrees Celsius.
f = B x C
It equals to a low B 4 = A 3 = B 2 = C 1 = D 0 = F
It means the value of the function equals zero when the argument is 4. For example: f(x)=x-4 f(4)=4-4=0
If you mean 5 times 0 then it equals to 0
0 equals Equator on The Meridian Line (0 degrees)
(f - 6) / 5 = 0Multiply each side by 5:f - 6 = 0Add 6 to each side:f = 6Notice that (f - 6) multiplied or divided by anythingalso equals zero.
Not according to the usual definitions of "differentiable" and "continuous".Suppose that the function f is differentiable at the point x = a.Then f(a) is defined andlimit (h -> 0) [f(a+h) - f(a)]/h exists (has a finite value).If this limit exists, then it follows thatlimit (h -> 0) [f(a+h) - f(a)] exists and equals 0.Hence limit (h -> 0) f(a+h) exists and equals f(a).Therefore f is continuous at x = a.
It just means that the value of 0 is equal to the value of 0, which is correct. It's like saying 2 equals 2, or 6 equals 6, or 52657 equals 52657... you get the point.