Yes, it often does. If you use the discrimnant, and the answer is <0, there is no answer, if it equals 0, there is one answer, and if it is >0 there are 2 answers
Yes and sometimes it can have more than one solution.
True
yes, if it is in brackets and the equation is doubled. (These are the words of my grade 12 teacher)
0 x b = 0 has more than 1 solution. This is because 0x1= 1 and 0x2= 0 does too.
Given the equation 3x + 4 = 7, will there ever be more than one solution for x?
The solution set is the answers that make an equation true. So I would call it the solution.
Yes and sometimes it can have more than one solution.
True
yes, if it is in brackets and the equation is doubled. (These are the words of my grade 12 teacher)
what is the number that can replace a variable in a equation to make it a true equation? 8 letters this is not a good answer go look 4 a notha one
A number that makes an equation true is a solution. If there is more than one answer to an equation (such as an equation like): (x-2)(x+4)=0 then it is called a solution set (and in this case would be x={-4, 2}).
0 x b = 0 has more than 1 solution. This is because 0x1= 1 and 0x2= 0 does too.
add one to the problem
Given the equation 3x + 4 = 7, will there ever be more than one solution for x?
Always. Every ordered pair is the solution to infinitely many equations.
If the discriminant of a quadratic equation is less than zero then it has no solutions.
Parallel but non-coincident or, in more than 2 dimensions, they are skew.