How Do You Solve the Equation V=C-(C-S)/(L-N)N for C?

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around solving the equation V = C - (C - S)/(L - N)N for the variable C. Participants express frustration and confusion regarding the manipulation of the equation and the correct approach to isolate C.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Assumption checking, Mathematical reasoning

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants suggest rearranging the equation to group terms involving C and those that do not. There are attempts to apply the distributive law and questions about the implications of multiplying through by L. Some participants express uncertainty about the resulting forms and the placement of terms in the denominator.

Discussion Status

There is ongoing exploration of different methods to isolate C, with some participants providing guidance on rearranging the equation. A few participants have identified errors in their approaches, and one participant acknowledges a mistake regarding the denominator. The discussion reflects a mix of interpretations and attempts to clarify the steps involved.

Contextual Notes

Some participants mention the book's solution, which differs from their calculations, leading to further questioning of their methods. There is a noted frustration with the complexity of the equation and the manipulation required to solve for C.

Wumbolog
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##V=C-\frac{C-S}{L}N##
Solve for C
I am extremely frustrated and have made countless attempts at this.

I would really appreciate a step by step on this. Thanks.
 
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Try this:

(1) Get all terms with C in them on one side of the equation, and all terms without C on the other side. In other words:

Terms with C = Terms without C

(2) Use the distributive law to write the equation as:

C*(Something without C) = Something else without C

(3) Divide both sides by (Something without C) so you have:

C = (Something else without C) / (Something without C)

Hope this helps.
 
Wumbolog said:
##V=C-\frac{C-S}{L}N##
Solve for C
I see an equation comprising 3 terms (one on the left of the equals sign, and two on the right hand side). What does it look like if you multiply each of those 3 terms by L?
 
##V=C-\frac{C-S}{L}N##

##LV=LC-C-SN##

##\frac{LV}{C}=L-SN##

##C=\frac {L-SN}{LV}##

but apparently this is wrong...

the book gives ##C=\frac{LV-SN}{L-S}##
 
Last edited:
\frac {C-S}{L} N = \frac {(C-S)N}{L}

Do you see it now?
 
Here's what I get:

V = C - N(C-S)/L | * L
LV = LC - NC + NS
LC - NC = LV - NS
C = (LV - NS)/(L-N)

So I have almost the same answer as the book, but I don't even begin to comprehend how an S can ever wind up as part of the demoninator.
 
Wumbolog said:
##V=C-\frac{C-S}{L}N##

##LV=LC-C-SN##

##\frac{LV}{C}=L-SN##

##C=\frac {L-SN}{LV}##

but apparently this is wrong...

the book gives ##C=\frac{LV-SN}{L-S}##

You should have ##LV = LC -CN + SN##. Do you see the two errors you made in line 2? Can you see why it is wrong to go from the line
LV = LC - C - SN (which, by itself, is wrong) to
\frac{LV}{C}=L-SN ? Would you say it is correct to go from ##5\times 3 - 3 - 4\times 2## to ##3 \times (5 - 4 \times 2)?## You are claiming these are the same!
 
Thanks guys I finally got it. And the denominator should have been L-N, my mistake.
 

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