Math, asked by sujaldethaliya, 3 months ago

constant term of expression 3​

Answers

Answered by saumya3655
0

Answer:

term=3

constant =1 because terms are these numbers which add and we have god an expression . the expression are made of terms like 3t+4 the 3t and 4 is terms

Answered by divya8199
0

Answer:

In mathematics, a constant term is a term in an algebraic expression that has a value that is constant or cannot change, because it does not contain any modifiable variables. For example, in the quadratic polynomial

{\displaystyle x^{2}+2x+3,\ }x^{2}+2x+3,\

the 3 is a constant term.

After like terms are combined, an algebraic expression will have at most one constant term. Thus, it is common to speak of the quadratic polynomial

{\displaystyle ax^{2}+bx+c,\ }ax^{2}+bx+c,\

where x is the variable, and has a constant term of c. If c = 0, then the constant term will not actually appear when the quadratic is written.

A term that is constant, with a constant as a multiplicative coefficient added to it (although this expression could be more simply written as their product), still constitutes a constant term, as a variable is still not present in the new term. Although the expression is modified, the term (and coefficient) itself classifies as constant. However, should this introduced coefficient contain a variable, while the original number has a constant meaning, this has no bearing if the new term stays constant as the introduced coefficient will always override the constant expression - for example, in {\displaystyle (x+1)(x-2)}(x+1)(x-2) when x is multiplied by 2, the result, 2x, is not constant; while 1 * -2 is -2 and still a constant.

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