SOLUTION: How would I solve the following logarithm? 2^x + 1 = 3^x - 4

Algebra.Com
Question 563994: How would I solve the following logarithm?
2^x + 1 = 3^x - 4

Answer by Alan3354(69443)   (Show Source): You can put this solution on YOUR website!
How would I solve the following logarithm?
2^x + 1 = 3^x - 4
-------------
What logarithm?
------------------
2^x + 1 = 3^x - 4
---------
What are the exponents?
Is it
or ??

RELATED QUESTIONS

How do I solve the following logarithm for x? The base of the following logs is 2.... (answered by stanbon,MathLover1)
How do I solve the following logarithm for x? The base of the log is x.... (answered by stanbon,MathLover1)
log3 (x2 − 4) − log3(x + 2) = 2 how would i solve this logarithm... (answered by lwsshak3)
How do I solve: log10(x+8)+log10(x-8)? Simplifying the logarithm into 1 log. Would (answered by stanbon)
How would you solve the following inequality problem?... (answered by mananth)
Using foil method, how would I solve the following equation (x + 3) (X -... (answered by Alan3354)
How would I solve the following problem? 2x-3(x+4)=-5... (answered by jim_thompson5910)
How would I graph the following equations: (1) y = x - 2 (2) y = x + 2 (3) y = -x -... (answered by jim_thompson5910)
I have a problem trying to solve this logarithm. log base 3 (x^2+1)=4 log3(x^2+1)=4.... (answered by ankor@dixie-net.com)