How do you solve 4x – y = 5 and x + y = 10 and which method do you use?

3 Answers
May 29, 2018

x=3 and y = 7

Explanation:

Here is the answer...

First take the second equation...
x+y=10
x=10-y ...(eq. 1)

Now substitute (eq. 1) in the given equation 4x - y = 5.

4 (10-y)-y = 5

40 - 4y - y = 5

40 - 5y = 5

40-5 = 5y

35 = 5y

y = 7

Substituting this value of y in (eq. 1), we get x=3.

Therefore, x=3 and y = 7.

May 29, 2018

(3,7)

Explanation:

4x-y=5--(1)

x+y=10--(2)

solve by elimination

(1)+(2)

5x=15

=>x=3

substitute into (2)

3+y=10

=>y=7

check in (1)

4xx3-7=12-7=5

=RHS(1)#

:. consistent

(3,7)

May 29, 2018

See explanation.

Explanation:

The system is:

{(4x-y=5),(x+y=10):}

It can be solved using any of 3 methods:

  • Using substitution:

From the second equation we can calculate that: y=10-x

If we put this in the first equation we get:

4x-(10-x)=5

4x-10+x=5

5x-10=5

5x=15=>x=3

Now we can calculate that y=10-3=7
So the solution is

{(x=3),(y=7):}

  • By adding both equations:

In the initial system the coefficients of y are opposite numbers -1 and 1, so if we add both equations we get an equation with x variable only:

5x=15
x=3

Now we can calculate the remaining variable y by substitution:

3+y=10=>y=7

  • Graphically

Both equations represent linear functions, so we can solve the system by graphing the lines and seeing if they intersect:

graph{(y-4x+5)(x+y-10)((x-3)^2+(y-7)^2-0.05)=0 [-10, 10, -8, 8]}

As we can see the lines intersect at (3,7), so the solution is:

{(x=3),(y=7):}

The choice of method depends on the system of equations. Here the easiest (for me) is the second method but others may prefer different ones.