The solution set is the set of all points representing solutions.
Solutions may be closed or open regions or they may be points within a region (for example, grid points for integer solutions), or points of intersection between curves or between curves and the axes. It all depends on what the graphs and the solutions are.
The coordinates of every point on the graph, and no other points, are solutions of the equation.
A line.
space
solution
The solution set is the set of all points representing solutions.
Solutions may be closed or open regions or they may be points within a region (for example, grid points for integer solutions), or points of intersection between curves or between curves and the axes. It all depends on what the graphs and the solutions are.
No, but there is one called all points east...
The coordinates of every point on the graph, and no other points, are solutions of the equation.
The shaded region above or below the line in the graph of a linear inequality is called the solution region. This region represents all the possible values that satisfy the inequality. Points within the shaded region are solutions to the inequality, while points outside the shaded region are not solutions.
Noncollinear points are points which are not all on a common line.
All points on the same line are colinear but if you mean what are the points all called collectively - they represent a "locus of points".
Although there are similarities, the solutions to a linear equation comprise all points on one line: a one-dimensional object. The solutions to a linear inequality comprise all points on one side [or the other] of a line: a two-dimensional object.
A line.
space
A point on a graph, when all nearby points have a smaller value, is called a maximum.