Ask a New Question

Asked by Sabrina

How would you solve the following equation when x= -6

x=y^2-5y
16 years ago

Answers

Answered by PsyDAG
Factor y^2-5y into y(y-5) and equate each of those to -6.

I hope this helps. Thanks for asking.
16 years ago
There are no AI answers yet. The ability to request AI answers is coming soon!

Submit Your Answer


We prioritize human answers over AI answers.

If you are human, and you can answer this question, please submit your answer.

Related Questions

How would you solve the following inequality algebraically? 0.5(x + 2)^2 (x - 4) > 2x + 3 How would you solve the following problem: m-(m+4n)-3n How would you solve the following 2 equations for "X"? x-4(divided by)12=7(divided by3 and... how would you solve the following by substitution? {4y-5x=9 {x-4y=11 PLZ HELP!!! T... How would you solve the following I'm stumped.. 1. 2x^2(squared)=30-4x 2. X^3(cubed)+8x=-6x^2(squa... Rearrange and solve the following equation for λ: hvλ=mv2 How would you solve the following problem explicitly? Sqrt(1-y^2) dx - sqrt(1-x^2) dy I separa... Use tables to solve the following correct to the nearest 1/10 of a degree.a)8sin_=3.b)16cos_-12=0.c)... Solve for 𝑥 in the following expression using the quadratic formula. 2𝑥2+31𝑥−7.9=0 How would you solve the following equation? 15 = y – 3 1.) Subtract 3 from both sides 2.)...
Submit Your Answer

Question

How would you solve the following equation when x= -6

x=y^2-5y

Ask a New Question
Archives Contact Us Privacy Policy Terms of Use