Five Plans Against One Constraint
| ✓ | ||
| ✓ | ||
| ✗ | ||
| ✓ | ||
| ✓ |
The Boundary Line: Where Equality Holds
Every inequality has a boundary — the line separating valid from invalid:
- Replace
with to get the boundary equation → boundary:- One side: boards used
✓ — other side: ✗
Drawing the First Boundary Line
- Set
: → ; set : → - Connect and label
Graph the Second Boundary Line
- Set
: ___; set : ___ - Plot both intercepts, connect, and label
on the same axes
Both Boundary Lines Drawn, No Shading
- Both lines drawn and labelled
- Intercepts:
, , , — all four marked - Draw both lines before shading either half-plane
Quick Check: Find the Intercepts
Find the intercepts of
- Set
and solve: ___ - Set
and solve: ___
Name the coefficient you divide by at each step before you divide.
A Line Splits the Plane in Two
Every boundary line divides the plane into two half-planes:
- One side: boards used
— the plan fits ✓ - Other side: boards used
— the plan fails ✗
To find which side satisfies the inequality — test one point.
Testing a Point: First Constraint
Test point:
Shade the side containing
Test the Second Constraint the Same Way
Test point:
Shade the origin side with a solid boundary. The same three-step procedure works for every constraint.
Which Shading Is Correct? Predict First.
After testing
- Student A shades the region containing the origin
- Student B shades the region not containing the origin
Which student is correct, and what rule tells you so?
Commit to an answer before the next slide.
When the Boundary Passes Through the Origin
If the boundary passes through
Choose
Example: boundary
Test
Solid or Dashed? The Boundary Rule
: solid boundary — gives ✓ (boundary included) : dashed boundary — gives ✗ (boundary excluded)- Rule:
or → solid; or → dashed
Quick Check: Boundary Through the Origin
The constraint is
Its boundary
- Which test point should you use instead of
? - Substitute and determine which half-plane to shade.
Write your answer before advancing.
Two Half-Planes — Where Do Both Hold?
The diagram now shows two shaded half-planes for the carpenter system.
A valid plan — one the carpenter can actually make — must satisfy both constraints at the same time:
Where on this diagram does that hold?
The Feasible Region: Intersection, Not Union
The feasible region is the set of all points satisfying every constraint simultaneously:
- Graphically: where all shaded half-planes overlap (the intersection)
- Not the union — satisfying one constraint is not enough
- NCDC convention: label the overlap F; cross-hatch the excluded areas outside
The Carpenter's Feasible Region, Labelled F
Region F: every point satisfies
Union or Intersection? Make Your Prediction.
The region covering everything shaded by at least one constraint is the union of the four half-planes.
- Does this region equal F?
- If not, pick a point inside the union but outside F, and substitute it into all four constraints. What do you find?
Test Two Points: Inside F or Not?
For each point, substitute into all four constraints — use algebra, not the graph.
Point A:
Point B:
Write out each substitution before advancing.
Is (3, 2) Inside Region F?
Substitute
— Is it ? — Is it ?- Is
? Is ?
What does your answer tell you about where (3, 2) sits on the diagram?
Your Turn: Build the Full Graph
On blank axes:
- Find intercepts and draw both boundary lines
- Test-point method — shade each half-plane
- Label F, cross-hatch outside
No diagram provided — start from scratch.
Four Mistakes to Watch For
M1: After
M2: Tick → shade that side; cross → shade the other.
M3: F is the overlap — not the union.
M4:
What the Feasible Region Now Gives You
✓ A system of inequalities carves out region F — the set of valid plans.
✓ Every point in F satisfies all constraints simultaneously.
✓ Corner points already visible:
Lesson 4: which corner maximises the carpenter's profit?
Click to begin the narrated lesson
Graphing Constraint Lines