the logic of why going from “y*x=z” to “z/x=y” is possible.

1.39K views

I ask this in relation to ” /(x/y) ” = ” *(y/x) ”

My mathematical ignorance does not allow me to perceive exactly what it is that confuses me about these manoeuvres and so perhaps my question is vague.

I have no difficulty with it as a technique; as something through which I can put an expression, and out at the other end the right result will appear. What I am trying to understand is *why it works*, contrasted with remembering it as a kind of magical spell.

​

**EDIT:**
It was very rewarding for me to read all of your comments. Thank you most kindly for enlightening me.

For those interested in the cause of my previous confusion:
The gaps in my understanding of going from y*x=z to y=z/x were definitions of the equal sign and division.

I can see now that I previously considered the = sign to mean «result» or «answer» in some sort of final sense, like a conclusion; I now see that it only states that this is equal to that.

Following this fundamental piece of knowledge, I can belatedly understand what an equation is. From there, via the definition of division as the opposite of multiplication, I can see that if I divide something while also multiplying it with the same number, these actions cancel each other out.

And so the magical spell between y*x=z and y=z/x is the logic above expressed mathematically as x/(y*x)=z/x.

In: 25

36 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

You just need a practical application to see the relationship between the variables. Given the following pie example:

X = number of slices in a pie (number of slices)

Y = weight of the slice (slice weight)

Z = The size of the pie (size of pie)

number of slices * slice weight = weight of pie (X*Y=Z)

alternatively

weight of pie / number of slices = slice weight (Z/X=Y)

or

weight of pie / slice weight = number of slices (Z/Y=X)

You are viewing 1 out of 36 answers, click here to view all answers.