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)
Given the equation 3x + 4 = 7, will there ever be more than one solution for x?
A linear equation in one variable has one solution. An equation of another kind may have none, one, or more - including infinitely many - solutions.
Yes and sometimes it can have more than one solution.
add one to the problem
True
The solution set is the answers that make an equation true. So I would call it the solution.
yes, if it is in brackets and the equation is doubled. (These are the words of my grade 12 teacher)
Given the equation 3x + 4 = 7, will there ever be more than one solution for x?
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}).
A linear equation in one variable has one solution. An equation of another kind may have none, one, or more - including infinitely many - solutions.
Always. Every ordered pair is the solution to infinitely many equations.
Only a linear equation in one variable x , which is an equation of the form ax + b = 0, (where a is different than 0), has only one solution. The solution is: x = -b/a
The number that can replace a variable in an equation to make it a true equation is called the solution or root of the equation. This number satisfies the equation when substituted for the variable. In algebra, finding the solution involves solving for the variable by performing various operations to isolate it on one side of the equation. The solution is the value that balances both sides of the equation, making it true.
an equation with more than one operation