How do you graph the inequality 35x+25<6 on the coordinate plane?

1 Answer
May 12, 2017

See Below for Answer:

Explanation:

First, let's simplify the inequality. Pretend for a moment that the less than symbol (<) is an equal sign (=) for a moment. So we now have an equation such as:

35x+25=6

From there let's subtract 25 from both sides of the equation:

25-25=0

6-25=-19

Now we have a statment such as:

35x=-19

At this point, insert the less than symbol back in:

35x<-19

Now divide both sides by 35 to get x alone. The final answer should be:

x<-19/35

On a graph, it would look something like this:

graph{x<-19/35 [-10, 10, -5, 5]}

The one above is the simplified inequality version. Below is the unsimplified version.

Now, let's compare it to that of the unsimplified version:

graph{35x+26<6 [-10, 10, -5, 5]}

It's checks out! They are both equivalent. If you get a fraction, it's much easier to keep it in fraction form instead of converting it to decimal form (in this problem we faced -19/25 as our fraction).

x<-19/35 means that any value you substitute into that inequality of yours that is less than -19/25 will work. Hence what is depicted on the graph. Any part of the shaded region will check out.