Originally posted by: coder1
I'm trying to solve this one.
4-(2x+1)<7-x
I was originally getting 7/11, but I know that is wrong.
When you have a negative in front of the parenthesis how do you handle that?
Thanks for any help from some of you math geeks![]()
Originally posted by: coder1
Man you guys are quick. Thanks for the help. I tried it again and right before the end I got -x<4 Do you just redistribute the negative to the four so it looks like x<-4?
Thanks again for your help.
yesOriginally posted by: coder1
Here's another question. When you have something like -x=-1 can it be rewritten as x=1 And is that doe by multiplying both sides by -1?
Thanks again.
Originally posted by: coder1
Here's another question. When you have something like -x=-1 can it be rewritten as x=1 And is that doe by multiplying both sides by -1?
Thanks again.
Originally posted by: coder1
Here's another question. When you have something like -x=-1 can it be rewritten as x=1 And is that doe by multiplying both sides by -1?
Thanks again.
Originally posted by: coder1
Here's another question. When you have something like -x=-1 can it be rewritten as x=1 And is that doe by multiplying both sides by -1?
Thanks again.
Originally posted by: coder1
lol, I would probably suck even at elem algebra.
