variable
(noun)
An alphabetic character representing a number that is arbitrary or unknown.
(noun)
A symbol that represents a quantity in a mathematical expression, as used in many sciences.
Examples of variable in the following topics:
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Introduction to Variables
- Variables are used in mathematics to denote arbitrary or unknown numbers.
- Variables can represent numbers whose values are not yet known.
- Variables may describe some mathematical properties.
- To distinguish among the different variables, $x$ is called an unknown, and the variables that are multiplied by $x$ are called coefficients.
- Therefore, a term may simply be a constant or a variable, or it may include both a coefficient and an unknown variable.
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What is an Equation?
- Equations with variables have solutions, or values for the variables that make the statements true.
- In many cases, an equation contains one or more variables.
- It is possible for equations to have more than one variable.
- For example, $x + y + 7 = 13$ is an equation in two variables.
- When an equation contains a variable such as $x$, this variable is considered an unknown value.
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Equations in Two Variables
- Equations in two variables represent the relationship between two variables and have a series of solutions.
- Equations can have multiple variables; such equations express the relationship between its variables.
- Equations in two variables often express a relationship between the variables $x$ and $y$, which correspond to Cartesian coordinates.
- Equations in two variables have not only one solution, but a series of solutions that satisfy the equation for both variables.
- For a given equation in two variables, choosing a value for one variable dictates what the value of the other variable will be.
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The Elimination Method
- The elimination method is used to eliminate a variable in order to more simply solve for the remaining variable(s) in a system of equations.
- The elimination method for solving systems of equations, also known as elimination by addition, is a way to eliminate one of the variables in the system in order to more simply evaluate the remaining variable.
- Once the values for the remaining variables have been found successfully, they are substituted into the original equation in order to find the correct value for the other variable.
- First, line up the variables so that the equations can be easily added together in a later step:
- If not, multiply one equation by a number that allow the variables to cancel out.
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Solving Systems of Equations in Three Variables
- A system of equations in three variables involves two or more equations, each of which contains between one and three variables.
- In a system of equations in three variables, you can have one or more equations, each of which may contain one or more of the three variables, usually x, y, and z.
- The substitution method of solving a system of equations in three variables involves identifying an equation that can be easily by written with a single variable as the subject (by solving the equation for that variable).
- Next, substitute that expression where that variable appears in the other two equations, thereby obtaining a smaller system with fewer variables.
- As the equations grow simpler through the elimination of some variables, a variable will eventually appear in fully solvable form, and this value can then be "back-substituted" into previously derived equations by plugging this value in for the variable.
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Direct and Inverse Variation
- Two variables in direct variation have a linear relationship, while variables in inverse variation do not.
- Simply put, two variables are in direct variation when the same thing that happens to one variable happens to the other.
- The two variables may be considered directly proportional.
- Doing so, the variables would abide by the relationship:
- In fact, two variables are said to be inversely proportional when an operation of change is performed on one variable and the opposite happens to the other.
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Direct Variation
- When two variables change proportionally to each other, they are said to be in direct variation.
- Knowing that the relationship between two variables is constant, we can show their relationship as :
- Doing so, the variables would abide by the relationship:
- Any augmentation of one variable would lead to an equal augmentation of the other.
- The line y=kx is an example of direct variation between variables x and y.
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The Substitution Method
- The substitution method for solving systems of equations is a way to simplify the system of equations by expressing one variable in terms of another, thus removing one variable from an equation.
- When the resulting simplified equation has only one variable to work with, the equation becomes solvable.
- In the first equation, solve for one of the variables in terms of the others.
- Note that now this equation only has one variable (y).
- Now that we know the value of y, we can use it to find the value of the other variable, x.
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Combined Variation
- Simply put, two variables are in direct variation when the same thing that happens to one variable happens to the other.
- The two variables may be considered directly proportional.
- Two variables are said to be in inverse variation, or are inversely proportional, when an operation of change is performed on one variable and the opposite happens to the other.
- To have variables that are in combined variation, the equation must have variables that are in both direct and inverse variation, as shown in the example below.
- Solving for P, we can determine the variation of the variables.
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Graphical Representations of Functions
- Functions have an independent variable and a dependent variable.
- When we look at a function such as $f(x)=\frac{1}{2}x$, we call the variable that we are changing, in this case $x$, the independent variable.
- We assign the value of the function to a variable, in this case $y$, that we call the dependent variable.
- We choose a few values for the independent variable, $x$.
- Start by choosing values for the independent variable, $x$.