Graphing Inequalities on a Number Line
Represent inequality solutions visually using open circles (strict: $<$ or $>$) and closed circles (non-strict: $\leq$ or $\geq$), with an arrow showing the direction of the solution set. Learn to read graphs and write the matching inequality.
Draw $x \geq 3$ and $x < 3$ on a number line. Before reading on — how do the two graphs differ? What tells you whether the boundary value 3 is included?
A number line graph shows the solution set of an inequality. The endpoint is drawn as a circle, and the arrow shows which direction the solutions extend.
Open circle (hollow) — the endpoint is NOT included. Use for $<$ and $>$. Closed circle (filled) — the endpoint IS included. Use for $\leq$ and $\geq$.
Key facts
- Open circle = strict inequality ($<$, $>$) — boundary not included.
- Closed circle = non-strict ($\leq$, $\geq$) — boundary included.
- Arrow direction shows which values are in the solution set.
Concepts
- How to interpret a number line graph as an inequality statement.
- Why a single graph can represent infinitely many solutions.
- How to verify whether a value is in the solution set from a graph.
Skills
- Draw the number line graph for any single-variable inequality.
- Write the inequality shown by a given graph.
- Identify specific values as in or outside the solution set.
To graph an inequality on a number line, follow three steps: (1) mark the boundary value, (2) draw the correct circle (open or closed), (3) draw an arrow in the correct direction.
What to write in your book
- Three steps: mark boundary, choose circle (open or closed), draw arrow in direction of solutions.
- $<$ and $>$ use open circles. $\leq$ and $\geq$ use closed circles.
- Arrow right = larger values ($>$, $\geq$). Arrow left = smaller values ($<$, $\leq$).
To write an inequality from a number line graph, identify: the boundary value, whether it uses an open or closed circle, and the direction of the arrow. Then write the inequality accordingly.
Example: if the graph shows a closed circle at 5 with an arrow pointing right, the inequality is $x \geq 5$.
What to write in your book
- To write the inequality from a graph: boundary value + circle type + arrow direction.
- Open circle + arrow right → $x >$ boundary. Closed circle + arrow right → $x \geq$ boundary.
- Open circle + arrow left → $x <$ boundary. Closed circle + arrow left → $x \leq$ boundary.
From a number line graph of $x \geq 3$, you can read off whether any specific value is a solution. Values shaded (in the arrow direction, including a closed boundary) are solutions. Values on the unshaded side are not.
For $x \geq 3$: $x = 5$ is a solution (shaded). $x = 3$ is a solution (closed circle — included). $x = 2$ is NOT a solution (unshaded).
What to write in your book
- A value is a solution if it lies in the shaded/arrowed region, including a closed boundary.
- A value is NOT a solution if it lies outside the shaded region, or at an open boundary.
- Substitute the value into the original inequality to verify: the inequality should be true.
Worked examples · 3 in a row, reveal as you go
Draw the number line representation of $x > 2$.
A graph shows a closed circle at $-3$ with an arrow pointing left. Write the inequality.
Solve $2x - 1 \geq 5$ and represent the solution on a number line.
What to write in your book
- Draw the graph after solving: boundary value → circle type → arrow direction.
- Verify by checking at least two values: one inside and one outside the solution set.
- The boundary value itself is only included if the circle is closed.
- Draw the number line graph for $x \leq -2$.
- Write the inequality for: open circle at 4, arrow pointing right.
- Solve $3x - 6 > 9$ and draw the solution on a number line.
- Is $x = -2$ in the solution set of $x \leq -2$? Explain.
The speed limit of 60 km/h means $v \leq 60$: closed circle at 60, arrow pointing left (all speeds from 0 up to and including 60 are legal). $v = 60$ is legal (closed circle), $v = 61$ is not.
Earlier you described how the two graphs $x \geq 3$ and $x < 3$ differ. Now write a precise statement explaining what the circle type and arrow tell you, using the speed limit as an example.
Pick your answer, then rate your confidence — that tells the system what to drill next.
Q1. Solve $4x + 3 > 11$ and draw the solution on a number line. Describe the circle and arrow. (3 marks)
Q2. A number line graph has a closed circle at $-4$ and an arrow pointing left. Write the inequality and check one value. (2 marks)
Q3. Explain the difference between open and closed circles on a number line graph. Give one example of each. (2 marks)
📖 Comprehensive answers (click to reveal)
Practice 1: Closed circle at $-2$, arrow left. Practice 2: $x > 4$. Practice 3: $x > 5$, open circle at 5, arrow right. Practice 4: Yes — closed circle means $-2$ is included.
Q1 (3 marks): $4x > 8 \Rightarrow x > 2$ [1]. Open circle at 2, arrow right [1]. Check: $x = 3$: $4(3)+3=15 > 11$ ✓ [1].
Q2 (2 marks): $x \leq -4$ [1]. Check: $x = -5$: $-5 \leq -4$ ✓ [1].
Q3 (2 marks): Open circle = endpoint not included, used for strict inequalities ($<$, $>$), e.g. $x > 3$ [1]. Closed circle = endpoint included, used for $\leq$ or $\geq$, e.g. $x \leq 3$ [1].
Match inequalities to their number line graphs and vice versa. Beat the boss to bank a tier.
⚔ Enter the arenaClimb platforms by answering number line inequality questions. Pool: lesson 15.
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