Step-by-step explanation:
the error:
it is stated that
[tex]\frac{5x}{x+7} +\frac{7}{x} = \frac{5x}{x+7} +\frac{7(7)}{x+7}[/tex]
subtract (5x)/(x+7) from both sides
[tex]\frac{7}{x} = \frac{7(7)}{x+7}[/tex]
multiply both sides by x + 7
7(x+7) = 49x
7x + 49 = 49x
subtract 7x from both sides to isolate x and its coefficient
49 = 42x
thus, this is only true when 49 = 42x. in order for these two equations to be equal, they must always be true, so this is wrong
the solution:
we want to express 7/x as (something) / (x+7). to do this, we can multiply 7/x by 1.
anything divided by itself = 1. thus, if we multiply both the numerator and the denominator by something that turns x into (x+7), we can do what we want to do.
(x+7)/x * x turns x into (x+7), so we multiply both the numerator and denominator by (x+7)/x to get
[tex]\frac{7}{x} = \frac{7(x+7)/x}{x+7}[/tex]
substitute this for 7/x in our original problem
[tex]\frac{5x}{x+7} +\frac{7(x+7)/x}{x+7} = \frac{5x}{x+7} +\frac{(7x+49)/x}{x+7} = \frac{5x}{x+7} +\frac{7+49/x}{x+7} = \frac{5x+7+49/x}{x+7}[/tex]