Stage 10 · Linear Equations & Systems

10.6  Applying Systems and Extending to Three Unknowns

When two things are unknown, name two letters — and the idea scales to three.

For ages 12–14 · Intuition before notation
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Point 2 of 5 in this lesson: 10.6.2 Sum, difference, multiple, and number problems

10.6.2 Sum, difference, multiple, and number problems

A whole family of puzzles is built from two numbers and two relationships between them. "Their sum is 30 and their difference is 8." "One is three times the other, and together they make 48." Each clue becomes an equation; name the two numbers and you are back in familiar territory.

The richest of these are digit problems, and they hide a trap worth naming out loud. A two-digit number is not its two digits stuck together — it is built by place value. The number whose tens digit is t and whose units digit is u equals 10t + u. Reverse the digits and you get 10u + t. Get that representation right and the algebra is easy; get it wrong and nothing will check.

Place value, made visible. The value of a two-digit number is 10t + u; swapping the digits gives 10u + t.
Worked example — the reversed digits

The story. The two digits of a two-digit number add up to 12. Reversing the digits makes a number that is 18 more than the original. What is the number?

Name. Let t = the tens digit and u = the units digit. The original number is 10t + u.

Translate. Digits sum to 12: t + u = 12. Reversed is 18 more: 10u + t = (10t + u) + 18.

The second equation looks bulky, but it simplifies beautifully. Bring every term to one side:

10u + t = 10t + u + 18the "reversed is 18 more" fact
10uu + t − 10t = 18move all the unknowns left
9u − 9t = 18combine like terms
ut = 2divide both sides by 9

Now the system is wonderfully simple: t + u = 12 and ut = 2. Add the two equations and the t cancels: 2u = 14, so u = 7. Then t = 12 − 7 = 5.

The number is 10·5 + 7 = 57. Check: 5 + 7 = 12 ✓; reversed is 75, and 75 − 57 = 18 ✓.

Watch out

The answer to a digit problem is the number, 57 — not "t = 5." A common slip is to write the value as "57" while accidentally computing 10u + t or just t + u. Always rebuild the number with place value: 10·(tens) + (units).

🎮 Try itSum-and-difference solver

Slide the sum and the difference of two numbers. The widget shows how adding the two equations finds the larger number and subtracting finds the smaller — the heart of every "sum & difference" puzzle.

Sum 12
Difference 2
eastmath.com · 10.6 Applying Systems and Extending to Three Unknowns · 10.6.2 Sum, difference, multiple, and number problems