It is asked to solve the PDE
$$u_x + u_y + u = e^{x+2y}$$
My attempt: We have that $$\frac{dx}{1}=\frac{dy}{1}=\frac{du}{e^{x+2y}-u} $$
$\Rightarrow \frac{dy}{dx}=1 \Rightarrow y=x+C_1 \iff C_1=y-x$
$\Rightarrow \frac{du}{dx}= e^{x+2y}-u \iff \dot{u}+u=e^{x+2y} \iff \\ \frac{d}{dx}(e^x u) = e^{2x+2y} \iff u = e^{-x} ( \frac{1}{2}e^{2x+2y} + C_2)$
As $u$ is constant along its characteristics:
$$u(x,y)=\frac{e^{-x}}{2}(e^{2x+2y} + 2C_2(y-x))$$
where $C_2$ is any function of one variable. But wolfram gave the following answer
$$u(x,y)=\frac{e^{-x}}{4}(e^{2x+2y} + 4C_2(y-x))$$
as you can check here
What am I doing wrong?