If x+y = 3 and y times x = 2 then y = 1.
y=x y=6-x Set the two equations equal to each other to yield a solution: x=6-x 2x=6 x=3 x=3 will satisfy both equations, that is plugging in x=3 will give the same value for y y=(3)=3 y=6-(3)=3
y = 12. It's the transitive property. y = 12 = 3x.
There are an infinite number of them. Here are a few: x= -2, y= -5/3 x= -1, y= -4/3 x= 0, y= -1 x= 1, y= -2/3 x= 2, y= -1/3 x= 3, y= 0 x= 12, y= 3
It depends on how y depends on x.
If x+y = 3 and y times x = 2 then y = 1.
X = 2 and Y = 3.
If x=4... then 'y' MUST equal 3 !
x = -2 and y = 3
This is definitely false; if x=2 and y=3, x to the y power is 8, but y to the x power is 9, which are not equal.
the answer is 42
No it equals 6 because x and y equal 1 in themselves
x=y
y=x y=6-x Set the two equations equal to each other to yield a solution: x=6-x 2x=6 x=3 x=3 will satisfy both equations, that is plugging in x=3 will give the same value for y y=(3)=3 y=6-(3)=3
y = 12. It's the transitive property. y = 12 = 3x.
if and x equal -18 find y -18 * 1/3 = -6
x = Y + 7z