Can you give me more information? If you just have a few ordered pairs, you can figure them out one at a time like I do here. But I'm guessing you mean something a little different?
Hello! I won't answer the question for you, but I can help get you started. If those ordered pairs are equal, it means that the x-values AND the y-values are both equal. You can represent this with two equations (one for the first coordinate, and one for the second): x+2y = -1, and 3 = x-y. Now you can use a technique you know (perhaps substitution or elimination) to solve that system of equations. Here's a video on substitution, in case it's helpful: th-cam.com/video/l3XlX6Tf5pc/w-d-xo.html&ab_channel=MeganMathTeacherSnow
You made me understand something in 8 minutes that my teacher couldn't in an hour
LMAOOO BRI WHY ARE U HERE
learning this the night before the exam at 10:34 😂
Also ty so much this helped me alot😊
I was stuck on this in my homework. I love you
You lifesaver! Thank you!
Thank you, doing both using the same equation makes it easy for me to see the difference between the two ❤
Where did you get -3 from the equation -9-3 =2x+3-3?
I wish you were my teacher!
Aww, thanks!
Can you help me find them if y+x=4
Thank you
What if you have multiple ordered pairs (2)?
Can you give me more information? If you just have a few ordered pairs, you can figure them out one at a time like I do here. But I'm guessing you mean something a little different?
Please answer this question
Find the missing value of X and y from the following equal ordered pairs. (X+2 y, 3)=(-1,2 x- y)
Hello! I won't answer the question for you, but I can help get you started. If those ordered pairs are equal, it means that the x-values AND the y-values are both equal. You can represent this with two equations (one for the first coordinate, and one for the second):
x+2y = -1, and
3 = x-y.
Now you can use a technique you know (perhaps substitution or elimination) to solve that system of equations.
Here's a video on substitution, in case it's helpful: th-cam.com/video/l3XlX6Tf5pc/w-d-xo.html&ab_channel=MeganMathTeacherSnow
I didn’t understand where did you get -3 on the second equation-9-3 ?
Nice 👍🙂🙂