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I have a question that does not have anything to do with coding.

So I'm learning about Sin, Cos, and Tan, but there is something that I do not understand at all. So my question is, what does sin(25°) = -sin(25°) ???? I do understand the sin(25°) but the part that I don't understand is the -sin(25°)! What does - sign behind the sin means??? I tried searching it at Google but I can't find a clear answer about it... does the -sin(25°) means sin(-25°) or it can be both sin(25°) and sin(-25°)??? Sorry for the stupid question 😭🙏🏻.

21st Dec 2023, 7:07 AM
MONEYQ8
11 ответов
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Mirielle Does the opposite you mean is like this (/)? or is it more like this (<)? I'm trying to draw a circle with parenthese and a line in it. And sorry for the bad english! I'm not a native.
21st Dec 2023, 8:42 AM
MONEYQ8
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brushing up on dusty trigonometry, this also applies to cos and tan. https://www.adelaide.edu.au/mathslearning/ua/media/36/useful-trig-identities.pdf if you think about it, putting a negative in front of sin, cos or tan is basically flipping it along the x-axis, so that makes it equal to the corresponding sin, cos or tan of the negative angle. so yes, sin(-x) is the same as -sin(x)
21st Dec 2023, 10:53 PM
Bob_Li
Bob_Li - avatar
+ 1
Is this the opposite you were talking about?? sin(25°) = -sin(25°) Y ^ | | * | * | * | * |-----------------------------> X * * * * This is the best angle I can only make with keyboard
21st Dec 2023, 8:55 AM
MONEYQ8
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Theres something wrong in your initial assumptions here. sin(25 degrees) is approximatly 0.4226. Obviously, 0.4 is not equal to -0.4. Instead, the actual general equation that you should be looking for is: sin(x) = -sin(-x) And in this case, sin(-25 degrees) does indeed approximate to -0.4226. Source: https://www.wolframalpha.com/input/?i=sin(x)
21st Dec 2023, 9:22 PM
Robert Butler
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Mirielle and Jay Matthews, thank you for the answers 😭🙏🏻 Hope you guys a have a great day!
21st Dec 2023, 9:05 AM
MONEYQ8
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Best to go to Khan Academy, it is well explained and you will be able to practice the knowledge with exercises. It is free, khanacademy.org you want to head to Math/Trigonometry.
22nd Dec 2023, 12:33 AM
Marcus Bigtree
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Robert Butler, Bob_Li, and Marcus Bigtree Sorry for the late reply! I will try checking all the sources and I'll try checking at Khan Academy too. Thanks a lot for the explanation! Thank you so much.
22nd Dec 2023, 8:45 AM
MONEYQ8
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I have no idea lol, x or y???
22nd Dec 2023, 9:40 PM
Aiden Smith
Aiden Smith - avatar