Uhm, actually 🤓☝️!
Afaik sqrt only returns positive numbers, but if you’re searching for X you should do more logic, as both -3 and 3 squared is 9, but sqrt(9) is just 3.
If I’m wrong please correct me, caz I don’t really know how to properly write this down in a proof, so I might be wrong here. :p
(ps: I fact checked with wolfram, but I still donno how to split the equation formally)
You’re correct. The square root operator only returns the principal root (the positive one).
So if x^2 = 9 then x = ±√9 = ±3
That’s why in something like the quadratic formula we all had to memorize in school its got a “plus or minus” in it: -b ± √…(etc)
So I checked this on my smartphone first, and thought maybe the software is just shit… So then I checked it on a Casio scientific calc, and both agree.
-3^2 = -9… And 9 != -9
… Are all the calculators somehow wrong? What’s the math rule I’m forgetting here…
x^2 = 9
<=>
|x| = sqrt(9)
would be correct. That way you get both 3 and -3 for x.
That’s the way your math teacher would do it. So the correct version of the statement in the picture is: “if x^2 = 9 then abs(x) = 3”