Unless it's something weird, then: p*(-8)+q... There's really nothing else to do with it since it's an expression and not an equation.
the product of 10p (p–q) is 10p²-10pq Given: 10p (p–q) To find : the product of 10p (p–q) Solution: we have to find the product of 10p (p–q). so product of any number means the multiplication multiply (p–q). by 10p we get, =10p× (p–q) =10p×p-10p× q =10p²-10pq the product of 10p (p–q) is 10p²-10pq
The sum of -p and -q -
The answer depends on what p and q are!
If the number is n, and the product is of the numbers p and q, the expression is p*q + (n + 15) : the parentheses are not necessary.
It is -8*p*q or -8pq.
The sum of p and q
The product of a p x q and a r x s matrix is defined only if q = r and, if so, it is a p x s matrix.
We can not provide a specific value as an answer to this question as both p and q are variables and their value is unspecified.However we can write this as:-8(p + q).We can multiply out the bracket to get:-8p + -8q.This is as far as we can answer this question unless the values of p and q are known.-8(p + q) = -8p + -8q
constant.
8(p + q)(p^2 - pq + q^2)
Let the two numbers be P and Q. So P+Q = 34. P-Q = 18. Add these two equations together:2P = 52. --> P = 26. Substitute into one of the original equations: P+Q=34 --> Q=34-26=8. The numbers are 26 and 8. Check to make sure: 26+8=34. 26-8=18
Q=3-P Q=7-P If Q is a private good, MC=8, how much is optimal?