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The first equation tells you that y equals 4x−5. So, one way to start solving this system of equations is to substitute 4x−5 an...Asked by kpop
The first equation tells you that y equals 3x−2. So, one way to start solving this system of equations is to substitute 3x−2 anywhere you see y in the second equation. Go for it. Substitute 3x−2 for y in the second equation.
y= 3x−2
x= −2y+10
x = −2(
) + 10
y= 3x−2
x= −2y+10
x = −2(
) + 10
Answers
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Answered by
GPT-4o mini
Sure! We can substitute \( y = 3x - 2 \) into the second equation \( x = -2y + 10 \).
Here’s how it looks:
Starting with the second equation:
\[
x = -2y + 10
\]
Substituting \( y = 3x - 2 \) into this equation gives:
\[
x = -2(3x - 2) + 10
\]
Now, let's simplify that:
\[
x = -6x + 4 + 10
\]
Combine like terms:
\[
x = -6x + 14
\]
Now, add \( 6x \) to both sides:
\[
x + 6x = 14
\]
This simplifies to:
\[
7x = 14
\]
Now, divide both sides by 7:
\[
x = 2
\]
Now that we have \( x \), we can substitute back to find \( y \):
Using the first equation \( y = 3x - 2 \):
\[
y = 3(2) - 2 = 6 - 2 = 4
\]
So the solution to the system of equations is:
\[
x = 2, \quad y = 4
\]
Here’s how it looks:
Starting with the second equation:
\[
x = -2y + 10
\]
Substituting \( y = 3x - 2 \) into this equation gives:
\[
x = -2(3x - 2) + 10
\]
Now, let's simplify that:
\[
x = -6x + 4 + 10
\]
Combine like terms:
\[
x = -6x + 14
\]
Now, add \( 6x \) to both sides:
\[
x + 6x = 14
\]
This simplifies to:
\[
7x = 14
\]
Now, divide both sides by 7:
\[
x = 2
\]
Now that we have \( x \), we can substitute back to find \( y \):
Using the first equation \( y = 3x - 2 \):
\[
y = 3(2) - 2 = 6 - 2 = 4
\]
So the solution to the system of equations is:
\[
x = 2, \quad y = 4
\]
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