You are looking for the solution to the function 2x - 3y = 7.
This means that when you substitute 5 for x and 1 for y, the equation makes sense logically.
(2*5) - (3*1) = 10 - 3 = 7.
This makes sense logically.
Without any equality and not knowing the plus or minus values of 1 and 45 it is not an equation so therefore it has no solution.
You would need to know what a is equal to in order to calculate this equation.
It is a linear equation in two variables
To solve the equation "x - 9 = 16," we need to isolate the variable x. Adding 9 to both sides of the equation, we get x = 16 + 9. Therefore, x = 25. So, 25 minus 9 equals 16.
If a equals 3 and b equals minus 5 then a minus b equals what
i think its 10
(4.25, 0.25) is a solution.
The equation has infinitely many solutions.
{-1,7}
the answer is y minus 10 divided by 2.
x = 2.1374586088176875 x = -1.6374586088176875
There is only one equation - possibly due to the limitations of the browser. There are not enough equations to derive a solution.
The equation does not have a real number solution. Using the quadratic formula will give it's conjugate pair complex solution.
The required equation is: -7x = 63
x = 4 and y = 7
Choose any value for "x", replace that in the equation, and calculate the corresponding value for "y".
The idea is to find a number which, when square, equals the given number. For example, asking for the square root of 100 means solving the equation x2 = 100. The solution, in this case, is 10. (Minus 10 is also a solution, but the term "square root" refers to the positive solution in this case.)The idea is to find a number which, when square, equals the given number. For example, asking for the square root of 100 means solving the equation x2 = 100. The solution, in this case, is 10. (Minus 10 is also a solution, but the term "square root" refers to the positive solution in this case.)The idea is to find a number which, when square, equals the given number. For example, asking for the square root of 100 means solving the equation x2 = 100. The solution, in this case, is 10. (Minus 10 is also a solution, but the term "square root" refers to the positive solution in this case.)The idea is to find a number which, when square, equals the given number. For example, asking for the square root of 100 means solving the equation x2 = 100. The solution, in this case, is 10. (Minus 10 is also a solution, but the term "square root" refers to the positive solution in this case.)