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18 votes
18 votes
SOLVE ASAP! Given f(x) = -5x + 1, solve for x when f(x) = -4.

User Hayato
by
2.6k points

2 Answers

15 votes
15 votes

Hello !

Answer:


\boxed{\sf x=1}

Explanation:

We want to find the value of x that satisfies the following equation :


\sf f(x)=5

First of all, let's replace f(x) with its expression :


\sf -5x+1=-4

Then let's substract 1 from both sides :


\sf -5x+1-1=-4-1\\-5x=-5

Finally, let's divide both sides of the equality by -5 :


\sf (-5x)/(-5) =(-5)/(-5) \\\boxed{\sf x=1}

Have a nice day ;)

User Niki Romagnoli
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3.1k points
17 votes
17 votes

Answer:

x = 1

Explanation:

Substitute f(x) = -4 as we get:-

-4=-5x+1

-4-1=-5x+1-1 —> subtract both sides by 1

-5=-5x

-5/-5=-5x/-5 —> divide both sides by -5

1=x

Therefore x = 1

User John Hua
by
3.0k points