@KvazProductions That is a really great and thought provoking question. Thanks for asking it. The short answer is yes! If we had 2x^3+4x, then 4 is the coefficient for the x^1 term, and 2 is the coefficient for the x^3 term. So, the coefficient is linked to the variable and the power. I Now what if we had 2x^3+4x+5? Well, 5 is really 5*x^0, because x^0=1. So, 5 is the coefficient of the x^0 term! That argument works for any standalone number. Does that make sense :)
@finbomartini Thanks for the question! 6 is the coefficient for 'a', 1 is the coefficient for 'b', and 2 is the coefficient for x^2*y, so they are all separate coefficients. If you haven't already check out the link in the description for this video to see it play on our main site, where you can see connections to other videos more clearly!
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MrWoopdycow 1 month ago
Why is she sweating soooo much...LOL
leosurge 1 month ago
thanks this helped me so much..... your a great teacher.... please do one on absolute value.. plz plz.......
shoneyb1 1 month ago in playlist More videos from VirtualNerd
thanks you made that really easy
Jaidan7777 6 months ago
Many thanks for this video. Always wondered what a coefficient was...
SamusDrake 7 months ago
man she's hot
speedyguy8 10 months ago
@speedyguy8 you are weird!
TRSandATL 1 month ago
So the coefficient can be a number that is not infront of a variable?
KvazProductions 1 year ago
@KvazProductions That is a really great and thought provoking question. Thanks for asking it. The short answer is yes! If we had 2x^3+4x, then 4 is the coefficient for the x^1 term, and 2 is the coefficient for the x^3 term. So, the coefficient is linked to the variable and the power. I Now what if we had 2x^3+4x+5? Well, 5 is really 5*x^0, because x^0=1. So, 5 is the coefficient of the x^0 term! That argument works for any standalone number. Does that make sense :)
VirtualNerd 1 year ago
@VirtualNerd Okay, thanks allot!!!
KvazProductions 1 year ago
they are separate
robbstews 1 year ago
So 612 is the coefficient of the equation? Or 6, 1 and 2 are all separate coefficients?
finbomartini 1 year ago
@finbomartini Thanks for the question! 6 is the coefficient for 'a', 1 is the coefficient for 'b', and 2 is the coefficient for x^2*y, so they are all separate coefficients. If you haven't already check out the link in the description for this video to see it play on our main site, where you can see connections to other videos more clearly!
VirtualNerd 1 year ago