Lesson 3.4 Solving Complex 1-variable Equations -

[ \frac{3(x - 4)}{2} + 5 = \frac{2x + 1}{3} - 4 ]

Now it was:

Kael checked it in the original fraction equation. It worked. The numbers aligned. The universe hummed. On trial day, Arch-Mathemagician Prime presented the final challenge: lesson 3.4 solving complex 1-variable equations

[ \frac{2(x + 3)}{5} - \frac{x - 1}{2} = \frac{3x + 4}{10} + 1 ]

[ \frac{2x - 1}{3} + \frac{x}{4} = \frac{5x + 2}{6} ] [ \frac{3(x - 4)}{2} + 5 = \frac{2x

Kael received his sigil. That night, the bakery ovens relit. Bridges were painted. And somewhere, his grandmother’s scroll rolled itself shut, satisfied.

Left: (-x + 8) Right: (2 - x)

These equations were nightmares. They looked like this: