Asked by nME
What is the solution to a system of equations telling us?
The number of spaces you move to get from one line to the other.
The plotted points for only one of the lines or equations.
The coordinates of the ordered pair(s) that satisfy both equations in the system. In other words, the values of x and y that will make the equations true. Also, when a system of equations is graphed, the solution will be all points of intersection of the graphed lines.
It doesn't tell us anything. There is never a solution.
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
The correct choice is the third one.
The solution to a system of equations is the coordinate(s) of the ordered pair(s) (x,y) that satisfy both equations — i.e., the point(s) where the graphed lines (or curves) intersect. (Special cases: no solution = parallel lines; infinitely many solutions = the same line.)
The solution to a system of equations is the coordinate(s) of the ordered pair(s) (x,y) that satisfy both equations — i.e., the point(s) where the graphed lines (or curves) intersect. (Special cases: no solution = parallel lines; infinitely many solutions = the same line.)
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