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2 Answers

An excluded value of x≠-6 implies that x=-6 is the only value for which the expression is defined. But if x≠13 is excluded then x=13 is the only value for which the expression is defined. Since x cannot be both -6 and 13, I think the excluded values are x=-6 and x=13, in which case an example would be 1/((x+6)(x-13)) or 1/(x²-7x-78).

by Top Rated User (1.2m points)

Create an expression that has the excluded values of ≠−6 and ≠1/3. Be prepared to share your expression to the class.

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