you cant
1.6
these tiles are gradient.
34.875
real life using of gradient
Draw a tangent to the curve at the point where you need the gradient and find the gradient of the line by using gradient = up divided by across
Being able to work without a calculator will give you a deeper understanding of maths and arithmetic, and the methods (either using your brain or on paper) used to reach a correct answer. A calculator won't show you how to work the calculation, but will give an answer at the touch of a button or two. It is best to learn without a calculator first, before relying on a calculator.
I don't think Christians have anything against calculators as such! The important thing is to know what your teacher is asking you to practise in the assignment. If it's the numerical methods themselves, you are cheating yourself and wasting your time if you are using a calculator instead. However if the point of the homework is showing you can set up the problem correctly there is nothing wrong with using a calculator to work out the final answer. However, always show your work.
'Rad' is radians, 'deg' is degrees, and 'grad' is gradient; all used in calculus.
A calculator works by using electronic components to perform mathematical operations using algorithms programmed into its software. When you input numbers and operations, the calculator processes this information and displays the calculated result on its screen. The electronic circuits and software work together to execute these computations quickly and accurately.
basically the reciprocal of the original lines gradient is going to be the gradient for the perpendicular line (remember the signs should switch). For example if i had a line with the gradient of 3, then the gradient of the perpendicular line will be -1over3. But if the line had the gradient of -3, then the line perpendicular to that line will have the gradient 1over3.
does it have graph calculator
The answer depends on what functions are built into your calculator. Read the calculator manual.