It can. And does, for example, in the hyperbolic trigonometric functions. It can make the solution harder but there is no law that says that solutions must be easy!
It is called a variable fraction.
It is a variable fraction. The exact nature will depend on the form in which the variable appears:as part of an algebraic, trigonometric, etc function. In some cases the fraction will have a name, in others it will not.
-- If the equation has only one variable (like 'x' or 'y'), and the only power of the variable anywhere in the equation is '1', then the equation has one solution. -- If the variable appears raised to powers higher than '1', then there are as many solutions as the highest power of the variable. -- If the equation has two or more variables, then there are an infinite number of solutions.
It is a variable fraction. The exact nature will depend on the form in which the variable appears:as part of an algebraic, trigonometric, etc function. In some cases the fraction will have a name, in others it will not.
well, an equation with one variable is a one step equation and an equation with more than 2 variables is a multi-step equation
Only if it has an equality sign otherwise it is an expression.
It is called a variable fraction.
It is a variable fraction. The exact nature will depend on the form in which the variable appears:as part of an algebraic, trigonometric, etc function. In some cases the fraction will have a name, in others it will not.
-- If the equation has only one variable (like 'x' or 'y'), and the only power of the variable anywhere in the equation is '1', then the equation has one solution. -- If the variable appears raised to powers higher than '1', then there are as many solutions as the highest power of the variable. -- If the equation has two or more variables, then there are an infinite number of solutions.
Simultaneous equation* * * * *No, simultaneous equations are two or more equations that have all to be true at the same time (simultaneously) for the solution.An equation with more than one variable is a multivariate equaion.Area = 0.5*Length*Height or a = 0.5*l*h for the area of a triangle has more than one variables, but it is certainly not simultaneous.An equation with a variable is called a single variable equation. An equation that has more than one variable is called as a multi-variable equation. A polynomial equation has one variable in different powers: a common example is quadratic equations.
An equation with more than one variable is called a multivariate equation.
It is a variable fraction. The exact nature will depend on the form in which the variable appears:as part of an algebraic, trigonometric, etc function. In some cases the fraction will have a name, in others it will not.
A bivariate equation.
Multivariable equation
Multivariable equation
You are given a system of n or more simultaneous linear equations involving n unknowns. Pick one of the unknowns, called the pivot variable. Find an equation in which it appears, called the pivot equation.
well, an equation with one variable is a one step equation and an equation with more than 2 variables is a multi-step equation