Sin^2@=3/4 Sin=+/-radical 3/4 = radical 3 over -2 How is +/-radical 3/4 changed to radical 3 over -2 Thank You ------------------------------------------------------ You are confused about the symbol ±. It means "positive or negative" It's written ± (hold down alt while typing 0177 on the keypad with Num Lock on.) ±5 means either one of the two numbers +5 or -5. ±23.684 means either one of thes two numbers +23.684 or -23.684 It's not +/-, but sometimes when people don't know the alt symbols they write +/- for ± You mistakenly took the forward slash / to mean "divided by". It doesn't mean "positive divided by negative" Let's go thru the problem: cos(2x) + 6·sin²(x) = 4 1 - 2·sin²x + 6·sin²(x) = 4 4·sin²(x) = 3 sin²(x) = 3/4 Right here is where you take square roots of both sides. Every number has two square roots. So 3/4 has two square roots +Ö3/2 and -Ö3/2. _ sin(x) = ±Ö3/2 That represents two equations: _ _ sin(x) = +Ö3/2 and sin(x) = -Ö3/2 so your answer will be all angles with reference angle 60° or p/3 radians taken in every quadrant. Edwin AnlytcPhil@aol.com