" 3.44.3 " is not an equation, and there are no diagrams to examine.
The question strikes out all around.
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∙ 11y agoAn equation that is always true is an identity.
Seems to me like if it's not always true, then it's no equation.
Identity equation
The graph of an equation is all of the answers that are true for the equation. A variable is an unknown number in an equation. Most equations are written with x and y variables. There are an unlimited amount of numbers that the variables can be to have the equation be true, so you would graph the equation to show the unlimited amount of numbers that make the equation true.
Such an equation is called an IDENTITY.
True!
No, a branching tree diagram can also show relationships between living and extinct organisms, illustrating their evolutionary history and common ancestry.
Any number that makes an equation true is a 'solution of an equation'. it is a solution
A number that makes an equation true is its solution.
In math, an equation that is always true is called an identity.
An equation that is always true is an identity.
No, the equation showing distance varying inversely with time is not true. In reality, distance is directly proportional to time when an object is moving at a constant speed. This relationship is described by the equation distance = speed x time.
No equation can have that property. It cannot be an equation if it is not true. If necessary, the domain must be amended. An equation can have different forms over different parts of its domain.
The solution set is the answers that make an equation true. So I would call it the solution.
The equation is true under all circumstances if the equation balances.
an equation that's true for all values is an identity.
Seems to me like if it's not always true, then it's no equation.