Can someone help me figure out where I'm going wrong here:
For all nonzero integers n, n*=(n+2)/n . What is the value of x?
(1) x* = x
(2) x* = -2-x
I know its not (1), but I think it could be (2) because
x* = (x+2)/x = -2-x = -1 (2+x)
if you cancel (x+2) from both sides
1/x = -1 --> x = -1.
But if you expand it without cancelling, you end up with x^2 + 3x + 2, which I know to has x=-1, -2 as soln...
I guess, my question is, why cant I just cancel the x+2 after I factor a -1 out?
thanks.
For all nonzero integers n, n*=(n+2)/n . What is the value of x?
(1) x* = x
(2) x* = -2-x
I know its not (1), but I think it could be (2) because
x* = (x+2)/x = -2-x = -1 (2+x)
if you cancel (x+2) from both sides
1/x = -1 --> x = -1.
But if you expand it without cancelling, you end up with x^2 + 3x + 2, which I know to has x=-1, -2 as soln...
I guess, my question is, why cant I just cancel the x+2 after I factor a -1 out?
thanks.












