I'm new here, and I was wondering if any of you could help me out with this little problem that is already getting on my nerves since I've been trying to solve it for hours.
Studying for my next test on inequalities with absolute values, I found this one:
$$ |x-3|-|x-4|<x $$ (I precisely found the above inequality on this website, here to be precise, but, the problem is that when I try to solve it, my answer won't be $(-1,+\infty)$, but $(1,7)$. I took the same inequalities that the asker's teacher had given to him and then put them on a number line, and my result was definitely not $(-1,+\infty)$
Here are the inequalities: $$ x−3 < x−4 +x $$ $$ x−3 < −(x−4) +x $$ $$ −(x−3)<−(x−4)+x $$
And here are my answers respectively: $$ x>1, \quad x>-1, \quad x<7 $$
I will really appreciate if anyone could help me out, because I'm already stressed dealing with this problem, that by the way, it is not demanding that I solve it, but you know, why not?
What you have is almost correct, the last step is to restrict your solution to the corresponding region.
For example, for $x>1$, the answer must be in the $x>4$ region, so your answer for this region is $x>4$.
For $x>-1$, your answer must be in $x<3$ region, so your answer for this region is $-1<x<3$.
And for the last one, $x<7$, your answer must be in the corresponding region we had first, namely $3<x<4$, so your answer for this region is $3<x<4$.
Now draw these three answers on the number line and you'll have $x>-1$, the desired final answer.