It means that a problem has an infinite number of correct answers.
This could mean that there are no incorrect answers at all or that infinitely many correct answers alternate with groups of incorrect answers.
An example equation of the first type is 3x + 23 = 3x + 23, in which all possible values of x are correct from -infinity to +infinity.
An example equation of the second type is sin(x) = 0, in which the infinite set of numbers {..., -pi, -pi/2, 0.0, pi/2, pi, ...) are correct but the numbers between members of that set are incorrect.
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it means you can never run out of possible solutions - there are an infinite number of them.
There are infinitely many possible solutions. One such is {1.7, 3.3, 5.3, 5.7}.
If they are integers, then the possible answers are {1, 6, 8} and {2, 4, 9}.If not, there are infinitely many possible solutions.If they are integers, then the possible answers are {1, 6, 8} and {2, 4, 9}.If not, there are infinitely many possible solutions.If they are integers, then the possible answers are {1, 6, 8} and {2, 4, 9}.If not, there are infinitely many possible solutions.If they are integers, then the possible answers are {1, 6, 8} and {2, 4, 9}.If not, there are infinitely many possible solutions.
-- A single equation with more than one variable in it has infinitely many solutions. -- An equation where the variable drops out has infinitely many solutions. Like for example x2 + 4x -3 = 0.5 (2x2 + 8x - 6) As mean and ugly as that thing appears at first, you only have to massage it around for a few seconds to get -3 = -3 and that's true no matter what 'x' is. So any value for 'x' is a solution to the equation, which means there are an infinite number of them.
There are infinitely many possible solutions. Even if you limit your answer to integers, there are over a hundred. One possible answer {16, 26, 28, 30, 34, 34}