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An inconsistent equation (or system of equations) is one that has no possible solutions. That is precisely why we call it inconsistent; there is no solution set that can be substituted for its variable or variables that will make the equation (or system) true.
They each typically have two solutions, a positive one and a negative one.
A linear equation in one variable has one solution. An equation of another kind may have none, one, or more - including infinitely many - solutions.
One.
One solution: x = -4
An inconsistent equation (or system of equations) is one that has no possible solutions.
An inconsistent equation (or system of equations) is one that has no possible solutions. That is precisely why we call it inconsistent; there is no solution set that can be substituted for its variable or variables that will make the equation (or system) true.
They each typically have two solutions, a positive one and a negative one.
If the highest degree of an equation is 3, then the equation must have 3 solutions. Solutions can be: 1) 3 real solutions 2) one real and two imaginary solutions.
No. If an equation has many solutions, any one of them will satisfy it.
It has infinitely many solutions.
how many solutions does the equation have? 4x+1=5+2(2-4) a. one solution b. infinite solutions c. no solution
A linear equation in one variable has one solution. An equation of another kind may have none, one, or more - including infinitely many - solutions.
Equations can have many solutions. The equation of a straight line, for example, defines all points on the line. Even a simple equation such as x+y=5 can have a variety of solutions (x=1 when y=4, x=2 when y=3 and so on)
One.
One solution: x = -4
one...a truism applys