This question is from the 2010 version of Math Destroyer. It's Test 2 Question 40
What is the largest possible value of x in the expression |16-2x| ≤ 4?
A. 4
B. 6
C. 8
D. 10
E. no limit
The answer is 10.
Since it's absolute value it can be both |16-2x| ≤ 4 and |2x-16| ≤ 4, which is also what it says in the back of the book. When I do the problem out, I get x≥6 for |16-2x| ≤ 4 and x≤10 for |2x-16| ≤ 4. Since it's asking for the largest possible value of x, wouldn't the answer be infinity (no limit) because x is larger than 6?
I feel like there's something really obvious I'm not seeing 😕
What is the largest possible value of x in the expression |16-2x| ≤ 4?
A. 4
B. 6
C. 8
D. 10
E. no limit
The answer is 10.
Since it's absolute value it can be both |16-2x| ≤ 4 and |2x-16| ≤ 4, which is also what it says in the back of the book. When I do the problem out, I get x≥6 for |16-2x| ≤ 4 and x≤10 for |2x-16| ≤ 4. Since it's asking for the largest possible value of x, wouldn't the answer be infinity (no limit) because x is larger than 6?
I feel like there's something really obvious I'm not seeing 😕