A single linear equation in two variables cannot be solved.
Yes, y = -4x + 3 is a linear equation.
Yes if you mean: y-4x = 3
Yes
X^2 - 4X = 10 halve the integer of the linear term (- 4X ), square it and add to both sides X^2 - 4X + 4 = 10 + 4 factor on the left and gather terms together on the right (X - 2)^2 = 14 (X - 2)^2 - 14 = 0 Vertex is, (2,-14) -----------
4x + 10 = 14 4x = 4 x = 1
4x + 10 = 14 4x = 4 x = 1
A single linear equation in two variables cannot be solved.
In algebra, if the only variable (or variables) completely disappear when solving inequalities, then the solution set is infinite (any value). Example: 2x + 7 < 4x +16 solves to 4x + 14 < 4x +16 which is true for any negative or positive value since 14 < 16
No it is NOT always bounded. Here is an example of an unbounded one. 1. 2x-y>-2 2. 4x+y
Yes, y = -4x + 3 is a linear equation.
Yes, y = 4x + 7 is a linear equation.
Yes if you mean: y-4x = 3
y = 4x-3 is already a linear equation. The slope is 4 and the y-intercept is -3
Yes.
Yes
X^2 - 4X = 10 halve the integer of the linear term (- 4X ), square it and add to both sides X^2 - 4X + 4 = 10 + 4 factor on the left and gather terms together on the right (X - 2)^2 = 14 (X - 2)^2 - 14 = 0 Vertex is, (2,-14) -----------