Help! I'm Struggling with Trig f(x) = -2sin3x - 4cos3x

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To express the function f(x) = -2sin3x - 4cos3x in terms of the general sine function, start by multiplying the entire equation by -1 to simplify the coefficients. This transforms the expression to 2sin3x + 4cos3x, which can be rewritten as Rsin(3x - α). To find R and α, calculate R as the hypotenuse of a right triangle formed by the coefficients -2 and -4, yielding R = √((-2)² + (-4)²). The angle α can be determined using trigonometric identities based on the triangle. This method effectively converts the original function into a sine-only format.
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ok i have no idea how to do this, and I'm pretty sure I should.
i have to express this in terms of the general sine funtion

f(x) = -2sin3x - 4cos3x

I don't even know where to start
 
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Expressions of that format a\sin x + b\cos x can be rewritten in terms of a sine only for positive values of a and b.

However, you have negative values for a and b, so i'd start by multiplying throughout by -1.

Then you could say:

a\sin x + b\cos x \equiv R\sin(x - \alpha)

Expand the right hand side of the equation and equate coefficients to find R and alpha.
 
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Work out a right triangle with -2 and -4, where the hypothenuse is A = \sqrt{(-2)^2 + (-4)^2} directed an angle \phi.
 
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