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Amanullah Khan
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Amanullah Khan
In 2nd equation,
x<0
-x<x^2.....x^2+X>0....X(X+1)>0
there will be 2 equations ... X>0 and X+1>0... in which X+1>0 will become x>-1 ?


You are starting 2nd equation with X<0, then how can you take X>0
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Amanullah Khan
In 2nd equation,
x<0
-x<x^2.....x^2+X>0....X(X+1)>0
there will be 2 equations ... X>0 and X+1>0... in which X+1>0 will become x>-1 ?


You are starting 2nd equation with X<0, then how can you take X>0

Sorry, my bad! I was totally confused with something else.
Understood it :)
Thanks for bearing my stupidity :D
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separate |x|<x^2 into two statements
1. for x>0 , x<x^2 => 1<x
2. for x<0, -x<x^2 => -1>x (since x is negative, dividing by x flips the inequality)
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Generally, you can't 'divide out' a variable from both sides of an inequality, unless you know for sure whether that variable is positive or negative.

So, if you want to simplify something like x < x^2, you'd need to think like this:

- If I know for sure that x is positive, then simplify normally: 1 < x
- If I know for sure that x is negative, then I have to reverse the inequality, since I'm dividing by a negative: 1 > x
- If I don't know whether x is positive or negative, I shouldn't simplify it - or I should simplify it in a different way, without dividing both sides by x. For instance, start by subtracting x from both sides instead.

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