It is the circular disc with centre at the origin and radius = 3 units.
The line is dotted when the inequality is a strict inequality, ie it is either "less than" (<) or "greater than" (>). If there is an equality in the inequality, ie "less than or equal to" (≤), "greater than or equal to" (≥) or "equal to" (=) then the line is drawn as a solid line.
You have to graph an inequality on a number line. For example, x>3.The number 3 on the number line gets an open circle around it, and a line is extended to all the other possible equations.There is an open circle if it is a "greater than or less than" sign, and there is a shaded circle if there is "greater than or equal to, or a less than or equal to" sign.
5-ish
if you have y <= f(x), then graph the function y = f(x) with a solid line, then shade everything below that graph.
There are 12 inches in a foot. 2.5 feet is 12 plus 12 plus 6 which is 30 inches, so . . . 2.5 feet is not greater than or equal to 32 inches. It is less than 32 inches
times it
8
to graph in equaltities in two variables, you graph the two numbers and/or variables. then you look at the sign to see if its greater than, less than, greater than or equal to, or less than or equal to and you graph the line as dashed or a solid
FALSE
ya motherrrrrrrrrrr.
A Zebra.(:
it will be an infinite region bounded by the lines x=2 and x=6
The graph is the set of all value of x that are less than or equal to 3, so you draw a line parallel to the number line, under the 3 and to the left of it (less than). Also, underneath the point three you draw a circle at the end o your line. Since it is less than or equal to you fill in that circle. Otherwise it would only be an outline circle.
The two inequalities define a region of the coordinate plane: there is no unique solution.
The line is dotted when the inequality is a strict inequality, ie it is either "less than" (<) or "greater than" (>). If there is an equality in the inequality, ie "less than or equal to" (≤), "greater than or equal to" (≥) or "equal to" (=) then the line is drawn as a solid line.
The relational operators are == (equal), != (not equal), < (less than), <= (less than or equal to), > (greater than) and >= (greater than or equal to). All relational operators are boolean, returning true or false depending on the l-value relationship with the r-value, with respect to the operator.
Ddookie