1. The problem is to solve the equation $$\frac{2x+3}{4} = 5$$ for $x$.
2. The formula used here is to isolate $x$ by eliminating the denominator and then solving the resulting linear equation.
3. Multiply both sides of the equation by 4 to cancel the denominator:
$$4 \times \frac{2x+3}{4} = 4 \times 5$$
which simplifies to
$$\cancel{4} \times \frac{2x+3}{\cancel{4}} = 20$$
so
$$2x + 3 = 20$$
4. Subtract 3 from both sides to isolate the term with $x$:
$$2x + 3 - 3 = 20 - 3$$
which simplifies to
$$2x = 17$$
5. Divide both sides by 2 to solve for $x$:
$$\frac{2x}{2} = \frac{17}{2}$$
which simplifies to
$$\cancel{2}x / \cancel{2} = \frac{17}{2}$$
so
$$x = \frac{17}{2}$$
6. The solution is $x = \frac{17}{2}$ or $8.5$.
This means that when $x$ is $8.5$, the original equation holds true.
Solve Linear Equation 96D6Bf
Step-by-step solutions with LaTeX - clean, fast, and student-friendly.