If you graph a system of two lines and all you see is one line, this means that both lines are the same. Any point on the line is a solution, so the system has an infinite number of solutions.
One solution
no solutions
infinitely many solutions :)
The slope of a line on a graph can be zero, or any positive or negative real whole number or fraction or decimal.
Coincidental equations are really the same and are the same line. They have infinite solutions meaning that any solution for one will be a solution for the other.
One solution
no solutions
No Solutions
infinitely many solutions :)
one solution
The graph of a system of equations with the same slope will have no solution, unless they have the same y intercept, which would give them infinitely many solutions. Different slopes means that there is one solution.
No. The graph of each linear equation is a straight line, and two or more lines can't all intersect at more than one point. * * * * * Unless all the lines are, in fact, the same line. In that case each point on the line is a solution. That is, there are infinitely many solutions.
Infinite simultaneous solutions. (The two equations represent the same line) OR If your in nova net the answer should be ( Many )
The slope of a line on a graph can be zero, or any positive or negative real whole number or fraction or decimal.
the scale would be how many units or numbers you go by each line in the line graph.
Coincidental equations are really the same and are the same line. They have infinite solutions meaning that any solution for one will be a solution for the other.
an independent system only has one solution, a dependent has many or an infinite number and an inconsistent system has 0 because the line are parelle