Yahya works at Target Pumpkin erasers cost $.60 each and ghost erasers cost $.40 each. He sold a total of 350 pumpkin and ghost erasers for $170.00. How many pumpkin erasers did Yahya sell?

3 Answers
Jul 3, 2017

7575 pumpkin erasers
275275 ghost erasers

Explanation:

let x=x=pumpkin erasers and 350-x=350x= ghost erasers.

0.6x+0.4(350-x)=1700.6x+0.4(350x)=170

0.6x-0.4x+ 140=1700.6x0.4x+140=170; distribute the 0.40.4

0.4x=300.4x=30; subtract 140140 from both sides

x=75x=75; divide both sides by 0.40.4

7575 pumpkin erasers
350-7535075 ghost erasers =275=275

Jul 3, 2017

150 pumpkin erasers

Explanation:

We can create a system of equations to represent this situation.

Pumpkin erasers cost color(orange)($0.60)$0.60 each and ghost erasers cost color(blue)($0.40)$0.40 each. In total, he sold color(red)($170.00)$170.00 in erasers.

color(orange)(.60)p + color(blue)(.40)g = color(red)(170).60p+.40g=170

He sold 350 pumpkin and ghost erasers, so the number of ghost erasers plus the number of pumpkin erasers must equal 350.

p + g = 350p+g=350

When solving a system of equations, the goal is to eliminate variables by adding the two equations together. Two of the same variables can only cancel out if they have the same coefficient but opposite signs (for example, 2x and -2x).

Let's multiply the second equation by -.60.60, so that pp will become -.60p.60p. Then, we can cancel out the variable pp by adding the equations together.

-.60 (p + g = 350).60(p+g=350)
-.60p -.60g = - 210.60p.60g=210

Now add the equations together:

cancel(.60p) + .40g = 170
cancel(-.60p) -.60g = - 210

-.2g = -40

Divide both sides by -.2 to find g.

g = 200

If 200 ghost erasers were sold, then the number of pumpkin erasers must be 150.

350 - 200 = 150

Hope this helps!

A very different approach just for the hell of it. The explanations takes a lot longer than the actual maths.

count of $0.6 rubbers is 150 larrpumpkin erasers
count of $0.4 rubbers is 200

Explanation:

This does use the principles used by the other contributors but just looks different.

Let the count of $0.6 erasers be C_6
Let the count of $0.4 erasers be C_4
Let the target count of C_6 be x

Then no matter how many C_4 there are the count of C_6 must make up the difference to give a total count of 350

So the blend can be anything:

from->" "0 at C_4 and 350 at C_6 larr" condition 1"
to" "->350 at C_4 and" " 0 at C_6 larr" condition 2"

Cost at condition 1 =350xx$0.6=$210
Cost at condition 2=350xx$0.4=$140

Target value of sale =$170.00

So we need to blend the two sale figures in a proportion that gives $170.

Tony B

The slope of part is the same as the slope of all of it.

("change in count of "C_6)/("change in sales revenue") =350/(210-140)=x/(170-140)

350/70=x/30

x=(30xx350)/70=150" at type "C_6

Thus we have:

count of $0.6 rubbers is 150 larrpumpkin erasers

count of $0.4 rubbers is 350-150=200