345
It is a sequence of numbers. That is all. The sequence could be arithmetic, geometric, harmonic, exponential or be defined by a rule that does not fit into any of these categories. It could even be random.
None of the following could.
I could not figure out the math equation. The new data did not fit the existing equation. An equation can be a math formula or standard method.
I try to be psychic, but fail miserably. If you could give me a clue, like the first few terms of the sequence, I could have a go at giving you the 77th term.
345
I'm not sure which equation you are referring to. Could you please provide more details or specify the equation you are asking about?
Which of the following equations could be used to solve for the tenth term of the following sequence?15, 13, 11, 9, ...
An inversion of the sequence GAGACATT could result in the sequence CATTCTC. This is because an inversion would flip the sequence and reverse its order.
It is an equation. It could be an algebraic equation, or a trigonometric equation, a differential equation or whatever, but it is still an equation.
3x + 2y = 8 This is an equation. It could be the equation of a line.
It is a sequence of numbers. That is all. The sequence could be arithmetic, geometric, harmonic, exponential or be defined by a rule that does not fit into any of these categories. It could even be random.
Not necessarily. It is simply an ordered set: it could be a sequence of random numbers.
None of the following could.
"Try as he might, he could not solve the equation."
Sure, it could be.
I could not figure out the math equation. The new data did not fit the existing equation. An equation can be a math formula or standard method.