Math, asked by RNR132505, 2 months ago

Make y as a subject of mx-y = c

Answers

Answered by anjali5087
8

Answer:

With multiple variables and only one equation we won’t be able to fully solve the equation to a numeric answer, we can only rearrange it better to leave x by itself to satisfy this question.

First subtract the c from both sides of the equation to move c to the left side of the equation. Doing it to both side moves one variable out of the x side which we want to isolate.

y - c = mx + c - c

y - c = mx

Step-by-step explanation:

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Answered by Anonymous
15

ANSWER

From your starting equation, subtract c from both sides (whatever you add or subtract on one side of an equation you must add or subtract on the other side). This gives the following equation:

From your starting equation, subtract c from both sides (whatever you add or subtract on one side of an equation you must add or subtract on the other side). This gives the following equation:y-c=mx+c-c

From your starting equation, subtract c from both sides (whatever you add or subtract on one side of an equation you must add or subtract on the other side). This gives the following equation:y-c=mx+c-cThe c’s in the right cancel giving the equation

From your starting equation, subtract c from both sides (whatever you add or subtract on one side of an equation you must add or subtract on the other side). This gives the following equation:y-c=mx+c-cThe c’s in the right cancel giving the equationy-c=mx

From your starting equation, subtract c from both sides (whatever you add or subtract on one side of an equation you must add or subtract on the other side). This gives the following equation:y-c=mx+c-cThe c’s in the right cancel giving the equationy-c=mxNow, to get x alone divide both sides of the equation by m

From your starting equation, subtract c from both sides (whatever you add or subtract on one side of an equation you must add or subtract on the other side). This gives the following equation:y-c=mx+c-cThe c’s in the right cancel giving the equationy-c=mxNow, to get x alone divide both sides of the equation by m(y-c)/m=mx/m

From your starting equation, subtract c from both sides (whatever you add or subtract on one side of an equation you must add or subtract on the other side). This gives the following equation:y-c=mx+c-cThe c’s in the right cancel giving the equationy-c=mxNow, to get x alone divide both sides of the equation by m(y-c)/m=mx/mThe value mx/m can be written as m/m times x which is

From your starting equation, subtract c from both sides (whatever you add or subtract on one side of an equation you must add or subtract on the other side). This gives the following equation:y-c=mx+c-cThe c’s in the right cancel giving the equationy-c=mxNow, to get x alone divide both sides of the equation by m(y-c)/m=mx/mThe value mx/m can be written as m/m times x which is1 times x, simply x

From your starting equation, subtract c from both sides (whatever you add or subtract on one side of an equation you must add or subtract on the other side). This gives the following equation:y-c=mx+c-cThe c’s in the right cancel giving the equationy-c=mxNow, to get x alone divide both sides of the equation by m(y-c)/m=mx/mThe value mx/m can be written as m/m times x which is1 times x, simply xThis gives the equation in x as

From your starting equation, subtract c from both sides (whatever you add or subtract on one side of an equation you must add or subtract on the other side). This gives the following equation:y-c=mx+c-cThe c’s in the right cancel giving the equationy-c=mxNow, to get x alone divide both sides of the equation by m(y-c)/m=mx/mThe value mx/m can be written as m/m times x which is1 times x, simply xThis gives the equation in x as(y-c)/m=x

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