Find the value of [tex]\( x \)[/tex].

[tex]\[
2x + \left( 37 \times 26 \times (7 \times 2) = (1 + 24) \right)
\][/tex]

[tex]\[
\begin{array}{l}
2. \ (3x + 7) \\
5x + 4 - 120 - 5 \\
6x - 120 \\
\end{array}
\][/tex]



Answer :

It appears that there is some confusion in the problem statement. Let's try to clarify and solve the problem one step at a time.

Given the fragments of the equation and expressions, it seems there's an effort to understand a certain mathematical operation or equation step-by-step.

Let's break it down:

1. Expression with `37_{26}`:
- Assuming base 26 (a non-standard numeral system)
- Let's clarify that, because typically problems involve standard bases like decimal, binary, etc.

2. Multiplication and Addition:
- The expression contains `37_{26} \times (7 \times 2)=(1+24)`.

Since parts of the context or surrounding text aren't clear, let's focus on a structured interpretation of such problems.

Assumption: Let's interpret `37_{26}` as a number in base 26. In base 26, `37_{26}` translates to:

[tex]\[ 3 \times 26^1 + 7 \times 26^0 = 78 + 7 = 85 \text{ (in decimal)} \][/tex]

### Steps:

1. Calculate the product:
[tex]\[ 37_{26} = 85 \][/tex]
[tex]\[ 85 \times (7 \times 2) \to 85 \times 14 = 1190 \][/tex]

2. Understand the addition:
- There's confusion with `(1 + 24)`. Interpret it separately.

#### Rewriting and Solving Steps with Equations:

- Given:
[tex]\[ 2x \left( 37_{26} \times (7 \times 2)\right) = (1 + 24) \][/tex]

- Assume simple calculation errors and fix the `+` sign mistake:
[tex]\[ 2x ( 37 \times 14) = 25 \][/tex]

- Next, calculate the product inside:
[tex]\[ 2x (85 \times 14 = 1190) = 25 \][/tex]

#### Solving for `x`:
- Rearrange `2x \cdot 1190 = 25`:
[tex]\[ x = \frac{25}{2 \times 1190} \][/tex]
[tex]\[ x = \frac{25}{2380} \][/tex]
[tex]\[ x \approx 0.0105 \][/tex]

So, `x` is approximately [tex]\(0.0105\)[/tex].

The provided values and intermediate calculations form the final detailed steps and results:

- Numerical calculations corrected.
- The final calculation step presented clearly as [tex]\( x \approx 0.0105 \)[/tex].