I'm currently failing a geometry course right now and I'm supposed to be having a test on Monday, but I don't know what to do. On the study guide, we were supposed to solve 5 problems and report back to get a grade and to do 5 problems and my professor did #2 on the board, but I have no clue how did he find 4/3. I know that 6 + 3/2 = 7 1/2, but I'm literally confused right now and I fear that I'll fail the semester if I don't do well on this test. Attached is a picture of the board and
#2. If anyone could help me solve for
#2, that'd be great.
http://imgur.com/a/hMrat
Or, well I should have explained it better. 4/3 would be the reciprocal of 3/4, but how does that turn into 15/2?
Isn't geometry a fucking 10th grade high school class? Damn anon get yourself together unless you're underaged which means you should gtfo
>>17577296
You realize you can take geometry courses in college to be an architect for example, right?
You wouldn't be answering questions like "What is the reciprocal of 3/4?" like OP said in college.
>>17577300
"It's no wonder most architects are retarded." - Your Friends in Civil Engineering
>>17577305
OP asked how would 4/3 turn into 15/2 and said he/she knows the reciprocal would have been 4/3 for 3/4.
>>17577271
>http://imgur.com/a/hMrat
she distributed and then she found a common denominator.