No, the two lines are parallel.
If the lines are parallel they have no solution; if the lines are the same line then there are infinitely many solutions - all the points on the liens.
2x + 4y = 9
-4x - 8y = 4
The second equation can be divided through by -2 giving the equations:
2x + 4y = 9
2x + 4y = -2
Left of the equal signs (containing unknown x and y) are the same, but right of the equal signs (containing just numbers) are different. Thus the second line is parallel to the first line and they have no points in common and thus no solution.
When (the graph of the equations) the two lines intersect. The equations will tell you what the slopes of the lines are, just look at them. If they are different, then the equations have a unique solution..
Solving equations in two unknowns requires two independent equations. Since you have only one equation there is no solution.
There are two equations in the question, not one. They are the equations of intersected lines, and their point of intersection is their common solution.
Both of them are equations!The solution is (x, y) = (2, 1).
Solving equations in two unknowns requires two independent equations. Since you have only one equation there is no solution.
When (the graph of the equations) the two lines intersect. The equations will tell you what the slopes of the lines are, just look at them. If they are different, then the equations have a unique solution..
No.
It's an inconsistent pair of equations, for which there is no solution.
x=3
Solving equations in two unknowns requires two independent equations. Since you have only one equation there is no solution.
There are two equations in the question, not one. They are the equations of intersected lines, and their point of intersection is their common solution.
Both of them are equations!The solution is (x, y) = (2, 1).
Solving equations in two unknowns requires two independent equations. Since you have only one equation there is no solution.
x = 1 and y = 2
In the equations Y=X-1 and Y=-X+1, the solution is (1,0)
That system of equations has no solution. When the two equations are graphed, they turn out to be the same straight line, so there's no such thing as a single point where the two lines intersect. There are an infinite number of points that satisfy both equations.
(0,7)