Asked by Shreya

Im trying to find the inverse of this: y = 2/3x-4

I got to this step

x+4 = 2/3y

I need to divide by 2/3 to get rid of 2/3 beside the y, but i don't know how to divide x+4/2/3 that looks complicated :\

Answers

Answered by Reiny
Here is the way I do these:

y = (2/3)x - 4

to find the inverse, I follow these steps

1. to find the inverse equation, simply interchange the x and y variables
So the inverse of y = (2/3)x - 4 is
x = (2/3)y - 4

2. Now you want to probably solve this for y
so multiply each term by 3
3x = 2y - 12
3x + 12 = 2y
<b>y = (3/2)x + 6</b>

to test it, take any value of x in the original
say x = 9,
y = (2/3)(9) - 4 = 2

now put that in as your x value, x = 2 in the inverse
y = (3/2)(2) + 6 = 9 , as expected

some folks clear the fraction first, then interchange the x and y variables, that is your choice
Try it , you must get the same answer
Answered by Shreya
thanks Reiny but the answer says y=3/2(x+4) is it supposed to be 6?
Answered by Reiny
mmmh, why don't we expand their answer

y = (3/2)(x+4)

= .....

well, what do you know ??

Either answer is correct.
Answered by Shreya
For the second step, to get rid of a fraction on the bottom, we always multiply it with every term? And if we are dividing something, then we divide it by every term? K i get how you got 6, but I still don't get how to get the x+4 ?
Answered by Reiny
y = (3/2)(x+4)
= (3/2)x + (3/2)(4)
= (3/2)x + 6

showing that my answer is the same as theirs

they simply factored it, there was no need to do that.
If you ever get an answer which looks different from the text book answer, try using proper algebraic manipulation to see if they are the same
Another way is to sub in some value of x, (like I did above) into both equations. If you get the same value, the two equations are equivalent.

And yes, if you multiply or divide one term by some number , you must multiply or divide each term by that same number
Remember, "Whatever you do to one side of an equation, you must do to the other side"
Answered by Shreya
Thanks Reiny that makes soo much more sense :)
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