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@viridaes >It's my pleasure. I'm glad to meet someone who appreciates math... I can't wait to crush that love, haha.
@viridaes >I plan on covering the entirety of Calculus I, unless my interest drops, but regardless, it's going to take a while to get to that point.
>Let me know if you ever want it personally explained to you at any time because I know waiting is boring!
@99kurta >This facility is heavily guarded, such thing as "running away" is nothing more than futility.
>You're going to be stuck here with me! And you'll do math! An ideal leisure time, if I may say so myself.
@99kurta >Why the confusion?
>It's fun, it's easy. What else is there to love?
>It's because it's a cubic! You can imagine the zeros as their own little stars of their show.
>See here, the x=-1 looks like a typical x^3 function while the x=2 looks like a typical x^2 function.
>Since the zero at x=-3 is linear, it passes through it as if it were a line.
>It's been brought to my attention (it hasn't, I just wanted an excuse to bring it up) that I didn't explain why exactly the line flattened itself out at x=-1 instead of crossing through it like a... normal person.
>If you're all too fidgety to wait for tomorrow, there are a handful of online resources you can refer to such as Desmos, GeoGebra, etc.
>Input your function, and these little toys will rev up an accurate graph!
>Let's test your new knowledge there a sub-game I just made up 5 seconds ago. I'd like to call it: Homework!
>Sketch these graphs for me, pretty please?
>I'll go over them tomorrow.
>We'll be trying to cover new examples that'll cover asymptotes and holes next time.
>Did you like today?
>No?
>Shame.