Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
Neither does it have linear factors modulo 2 or 3.
The quantity shall decrease by a linear factor of 1.5% per year.
In this case it is a product of linear factors with rational coefficients.
If a root has been found, the corresponding linear factor can be removed from p.
Allocations shall be adjusted by the linear factor referred to in Article 9.
It is a linear factor model with wealth and state variable that forecast changes in the distribution of future returns or income.
All linear factors with rational coefficients can be found using the rational root test.
Dividing a polynomial by a linear factor which decreases its degree by one.
After each root is computed, its linear factor is removed from the polynomial.
Therefore the linear factors are and .
Here, the denominator splits into two distinct linear factors:
The linear factors correspond to the lines that join the origin to the points of intersection of the curves.
In particular, if there is exactly one non-linear factor, it will be the polynomial left after all linear factors have been factorized out.
Ruffini's rule is a special case of synthetic division when the divisor is a linear factor.
With a reduction target of 30% the linear factor should be 2.5 unless the Commission shows that a different factor should apply.
The simplest statement of this constraint is by a linear factor, i.e., which leads to the so-called logistic function.
Factor P(x) completely into linear factors.
After each root is found, the polynomial is deflated by dividing off the corresponding linear factor.
The linear factor should be evaluated at the mid-term of the third trading period in the light of available mitigation potential and cost effectiveness.
Over the complex numbers, P splits into linear factors, each of which defines an asymptote (or several for multiple factors).
The linear factor divides both polynomials.
This flaw could be easily fixed by incorporating in the formula a more linear factor for the amount of time the child spends with each parent.
This factorization is similar to the factorization of the Vandermonde determinant into linear factors.
One can assign either one of the two linear factors to p(Z), thus one obtains 2 possible solutions.
The reduction of the free share should not exceed the linear factor of Art. 9 which leads to a reduction of 21 %.