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| Question 97660:  even though we have our books in algebra...
 I do not understand what our teacher is tackling about... maybe he is so fast in discussing of the topics so that we can't relate to him...
 In our homework... i don't know what i am going to do because this topic is not yet discuss unto us but i want to learned it so i can get high score during our quizzes...i just want to know if how come the answer goes like this...an=2n-6?
 our problem or exercise needed to solve is that:
 write a formula for the nth term of arithmetic sequence...
 ==> -4,-2,0,2,4,...
 can you help me please... can you explain it to me?
 it is not from the book... it's from our math teacher..
 
 Answer by stanbon(75887)
      (Show Source): 
You can put this solution on YOUR website! write a formula for the nth term of arithmetic sequence... ==> -4,-2,0,2,4,...
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 The formula for the nth term of an arithmetic sequence is
 a(n) = a(1)+(n-1)d
 a(1) is the 1st term of the sequence
 d is the difference between any term and the one before it.
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 Your Problem
 The 1st term is -4
 d = 2-0 = 2
 So the nth term is a(n)=-4+(n-1)*2
 a(n) = -4+2n-2
 a(n) = -6+2n
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 Cheers,
 Stan H.
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