y^2+xy-3x=-5

dy/dt=-4
x=3
y=1
find dx/dt.
i tried doing 2y(dy/dt)+ydx/dt-3=0 but i am not getting the right answer. Please tell me where i am going wrong.

your derivative is wrong, the xy needs a product rule

2y dy/dt + x dy/dt + y dx/dt - 3dx/dt = 0
plugging in our stuff

2 (-4) + 3(-4) + 1(dx/dt) - 3 dx/dt = 0
-2 dx/dt = 20
dx/dt = -10

you need to use the product rule for xy

x dy/dt + y dx/dt

Thank you for the help! Completely forgot about that rule... woops

To find dx/dt, you can differentiate the given equation y^2+xy-3x=-5 with respect to t (time). Applying the chain rule, we have:

d/dt(y^2) + d/dt(xy) - d/dt(3x) = d/dt(-5)

Differentiating each term with respect to t:

2y(dy/dt) + x(dy/dt) + y(dx/dt) - 3(dx/dt) = 0

Now, plug in the given values:

2(1)(-4) + 3(-4) + (1)(dx/dt) - 3(dx/dt) = 0

-8 -12 + dx/dt - 3dx/dt = 0

Combine like terms:

-20 - 2dx/dt = 0

Rearrange the equation to solve for dx/dt:

-2dx/dt = 20

Divide by -2:

dx/dt = 20/-2

Simplifying further:

dx/dt = -10

Therefore, the value of dx/dt is -10.

It seems you made an error when differentiating the term "xy" with respect to t. The correct application of the chain rule for differentiating xy is:
d/dt(xy) = x(dy/dt) + y(dx/dt)

To avoid mistakes, it's important to carefully apply the chain rule when differentiating terms involving multiple variables.