$$ \int_0^{\frac{\pi}{2}} \frac{3 \sin x+4 \cos x}{\sin x+\cos x} d x= $$
$$ \frac{\pi}{4} $$
$$ \frac{7\pi}{4} $$
$\pi$
$$ \frac{7\pi}{2} $$
The function $f(x)=e^{a x}+e^{-a x}, x \in \mathbb{R}$ and $a<0$, is strictly decreasing for all values of ' $x$ ', where
$x>1$
$x<1$
$x<0$
$x>0$
$$ \text { If the projection of } \vec{a}=5 \hat{\imath}+\hat{\jmath}+\lambda \hat{k} \text { on } \vec{b}=2 \hat{\imath}+6 \hat{\jmath}+3 \hat{k} \text { is } 4 \text { units, then } \lambda= $$
4
6
3
5
The equation of the perpendicular drawn from the point $A(6,1,3)$ to the line $\frac{x-1}{2}=\frac{2-y}{-1}=\frac{z-3}{2}$ is $\frac{x-6}{\boldsymbol{a}}=\frac{y-1}{\boldsymbol{b}}=\frac{z-3}{\boldsymbol{c}}$. If $\mathbf{a}, \mathbf{b}, \mathbf{c}$ are the possible integers such that $\boldsymbol{a}<0$, then the value of $\boldsymbol{a}-\boldsymbol{b}+\mathbf{5} \boldsymbol{c}$ is:
$0$
$11$
$5$
-$17$
COMEDK Papers
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