One- and Two-Step Inequalities
Solving One-Step and Two-Step Inequalities
Solving inequalities is a lot like solving regular equations. Your goal is still to isolate the variable on one side. However, there is one very important rule you must remember when working with inequalities.
The Golden Rule of Inequalities
When you multiply or divide both sides of an inequality by a negative number, you must flip the inequality sign.
- < becomes >
- > becomes <
- โค becomes โฅ
- โฅ becomes โค
If you add, subtract, or multiply/divide by a positive number, the sign stays exactly the same.
Solving One-Step Inequalities
A one-step inequality requires only one operation to isolate the variable.
Example 1: Solve x+3>7
Subtract 3 from both sides: x+3โ3>7โ3 x>4
Example 2: Solve โ3xโฅ9
Divide both sides by โ3. Because we are dividing by a negative number, we must flip the โฅ sign to โค: โ3โ3xโโคโ39โ xโคโ3
Solving Two-Step Inequalities
Two-step inequalities require two operations. Always undo addition or subtraction first, then undo multiplication or division.
Example 3: Solve 2xโ1<5
Step 1: Add 1 to both sides. 2xโ1+1<5+1 2x<6
Step 2: Divide both sides by 2. Since 2 is positive, the sign stays the same. 22xโ<26โ x<3
Graphing the Solutions
Once you have your solution, you can visualize it by graphing it on a number line:
- Open Circle (โ): Use for < (less than) or > (greater than). This means the number itself is not included in the solution.
- Closed Circle (โ): Use for โค (less than or equal to) or โฅ (greater than or equal to). This means the number is included.
- Arrow Direction: If your variable is on the left side (like x>4), the arrow points in the same direction as the inequality sign. For >, draw the arrow to the right. For <, draw the arrow to the left.