How do you solve multi step equations with variables on both sides?

2 Answers
Mar 26, 2015

Collect all terms that involve the variable on one side and all terms that do not involve the variable on the other side. (by adding and/or subtracting.)

Then divide both sides by the coefficient of the variable.

Mar 26, 2015

The way to solve any equation that contains however complex expressions containing a variable #X# on both sides is to transform it to a form #X=A#, where #A# is a known constant.

Sometimes it's impossible to accomplish. For instance, equation
#X+1 = X+2#
cannot be transformed in this format, then we say that an equation has no solutions.

Sometimes the transformations lead to multiple solutions. For instance, equation
#X^2+1=5#
has two solutions: #X_1=2# and #X_2=-2#.

The main question is, how to transform a given equation to a form rendering a solution. This should be addressed separately for different kinds of equations. Let's consider the simplest type - linear equations.

The linear equation that contains an unknown variable on both sides of an equation can be presented in the following general format:
#A*X+B=C*X+D#
where #A, B, C, D# are known constants and #X# is an unknown variable we have to find a value for.

Let's use the obvious rule of transformation:
if there are two equal values and we add the same value to both of them, the result will be two equal values.
In our case let's add a value #-C*X# to both (equal!) sides of an original equation. The result will be
#A*X+B-C*X=C*X+D-C*X#

The left side can be re-grouped (using commutative law of addition and subtraction), resulting in
#A*X-C*X+B#
The right side can be regrouped (using the same commutative law), resulting in
#C*X-C*X+D#
And both new expressions are equal as a result of these transformations:
#A*X-C*X+B=C*X-C*X+D#
Using the distributive law of multiplication relative to addition we can transform the left side into
#(A-C)*X+B#
Cancelling #C*X# and #-C*X# on the right results in #D#:
#(A-C)*X+B=D#

The equation now contains the unknown #X# only on the left.
Next step is add #-B# to both sides. On the left #B# and #-B# will cancel each other, resulting in the equation
#(A-C)*X=D-B#

Assuming #A-C# is not equal to zero, we can use another obvious rule of transformation:
if there are two equal values and we divide them by the same number not equal to zero, the result will two equal values.
So, divide both sides by #A-C#:
#X=(D-B)/(A-C)#
This is a solution.

Separately let's consider a case when #A-C=0#. In this case our equation after the transformations listed above will be
#0*X=D-B#
If constants #D# and #B# are equal to each other, any value of #X# will satisfy this and the original equation. We have infinite number of solutions.
If #D# and #B# are not equal to each other, no value of #X# would satisfy the equation - no solutions.

This is a complete analysis of all possible cases for linear equations with unknown variable on both sides.