You are ordered by the Doctor to administer 50milligrams of bubble gum to a patient. The bubble gum comes in 25mg per unit. You would dispense 2 units of gum to get the correct dose.
To solve the equation you need to know at least a value for x or y. For example if x = 2 then the solution will show that y = 1.
solve it
If you solve such an equation for "y", you get an equation in the slope-intercept form.
you can only solve for one in an equation so it can equal something
There is no such thing as "solving integers". You can solve an equation, which means finding all the unknowns in that equation, but you can't solve an integer.
it depends, please give an example of the equation.
"The teacher gave us an example of how to solve the equation."
You solve one of the equation for one of the variables. For example, if the variables involved are "x" and "y", you might solve for "y". It doesn't really matter what variable you solve for first, so you can solve for whatever variable is easiest to solve. Then - assuming you got, for example, "y = 3x -1", in this example you would replace every "y" by "3x - 1" in the other equation or equations.
I will be able to answer this question if you give me a equation as an example.
Sure. You can always 'solve for' a variable, and if it happens to be the only variable in the equation, than that's how you solve the equation.
you don't answer an equation, you solve an equation
To simplify an equation is to combine like terms, but you do not solve it for example: simplify 3X+4-X-6 2X-2
If it is a linear function, it is quite easy to solve the equation explicitly, using standard methods of equation-solving. For example, if you have "y" as a function of "x", you would have to solve the variable for "x".
To solve the equation you need to know at least a value for x or y. For example if x = 2 then the solution will show that y = 1.
solve it
If you solve such an equation for "y", you get an equation in the slope-intercept form.
A two-step equation is an equation that requires two steps to solve We must eliminate any constant that is on the same side as the variable first To solve, use the inverse operations to isolate the variable by itself Remember whatever you do to one side, you must do to the other