phillyolly said:Write the sum in expanded form.
I don't know where to start with...
phillyolly said:The first two are the ones I solved.
The book has no more information, just this one.
berkeman said:Hmm. Maybe others can see something we're missing, but I'd just write it out as a sum, showing the first few terms, then some ellipses, then the nth term. Do you submit the answer to an automated checking probram online, or send it to a human for checking? If it's an automated checker, you'd need to figure out how many terms before the ellipses it expects...
This means to write the terms in the sum: f(x1)\Delta x_1 + f(x2)\Delta x_2 + and so on. Since n is not given, the usual practice is to write a few terms, then + ... + <last term>.phillyolly said:Write the sum in expanded form.
I don't know where to start with...
Since you don't know n, you have to use an ellipsis in your answer.phillyolly said:My instructor will check the answer...I don't think I should use ellipses in the answer. Just expansion. I have no idea what to start with.
Mark44 said:This means to write the terms in the sum: f(x1)\Delta x_1 + f(x2)\Delta x_2 + and so on. Since n is not given, the usual practice is to write a few terms, then + ... + <last term>.