We are happy to help, but you should learn to check your own work and find your own errors. For one thing, it will greatly increase your confidence that you have grasped a subject.
How do you check a simplification of an algebraic expression?
Pick an example using numbers that are small in magnitude but greater than |1|.
Here we have an expression in two variables. Let x = 2 and h = - 5.
[math]\dfrac{x - (x + h)}{x(x + h)} = \dfrac{2 -(2 - 5)}{2(2 - 5)} = \dfrac{2 - (-3)}{2(-3)} = \dfrac{5}{-6} = - \dfrac{5}{6}.\\ \dfrac{h}{x + h} = \dfrac{-5}{2 - 5} = \dfrac{-5}{-3} = + \dfrac{5}{3}.\\ -\dfrac{5}{6} \ne + \dfrac{5}{3}.[/math]
You may occasionally pick an example that is accidentally correct although the simplification is wrong in general. (This happens most often with 1, 0, and -1, which is why not to use them in examples.) But 99 times out of 100, an example will tell you if a simplification is not correct.
We are happy to help, but you should learn to check your own work and find your own errors. For one thing, it will greatly increase your confidence that you have grasped a subject.
How do you check a simplification of an algebraic expression?
Pick an example using numbers that are small in magnitude but greater than |1|.
Here we have an expression in two variables. Let x = 2 and h = - 5.
[math]\dfrac{x - (x + h)}{x(x + h)} = \dfrac{2 -(2 - 5)}{2(2 - 5)} = \dfrac{2 - (-3)}{2(-3)} = \dfrac{5}{-6} = - \dfrac{5}{6}.\\ \dfrac{h}{x + h} = \dfrac{-5}{2 - 5} = \dfrac{-5}{-3} = + \dfrac{5}{3}.\\ -\dfrac{5}{6} \ne + \dfrac{5}{3}.[/math]
You may occasionally pick an example that is accidentally correct although the simplification is wrong in general. (This happens most often with 1, 0, and -1, which is why not to use them in examples.) But 99 times out of 100, an example will tell you if a simplification is not correct.
Since this is an odd numbered exercise (#71 as you indicated), you might have saved yourself some trouble by simply peeking at the answers section and figured out for yourself were you might have gone wrong. That said, to paraphrase SK, it (your final answer) looks good.College Algebra
Chapter 1/Section 7
I'll remember that for next time.Yes, you got the correct answer, but two points.
First, an example never guarantees that you are correct. It strongly suggests that you are correct.
Second, try to avoid 1, 0, and - 1 as exemplars. Those numbers have special properties that have a higher than usual liklihood of giving a misleading example.
Yes, thanks for reminding me to answer odd number questions. I can search the answer section in the back of the texrbook to see if I am right or wrong.Beer induced opinion and suggestion follows.
Since this is an odd numbered exercise (#71 as you indicated), you might have saved yourself some trouble by simply peeking at the answers section and figured out for yourself were you might have gone wrong. That said, to paraphrase SK, it (your final answer) looks good.