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Discover why some equations have exactly one answer, some have every number as an answer, and some have no answer at all.
People have been solving equations for thousands of years. Long before calculators or even written math symbols existed, ancient civilizations needed to figure out unknown quantities. How many bricks do I need? How should I split this harvest fairly? These everyday questions pushed humans to develop what we now call linear equations (equations where the variable has an exponent of 1, like 3x + 5 = 20).
Here's the big question this lesson answers: when you simplify a linear equation, how can you tell whether it has exactly one solution, no solution, or infinitely many solutions? Knowing this helps you understand the structure of equations, not just how to solve them.
Before we dive into examples, let's make sure we're all on the same page with a few important ideas. A linear equation in one variable is an equation that can be simplified into the form ax + b = c, where x is the variable and a, b, and c are numbers. The variable is never squared, cubed, or under a square root — it's always just x to the first power.
One powerful way to understand the three types of solutions is to think of each side of the equation as its own line on a graph. When you solve an equation like 2x + 1 = x + 4, you're really asking: "Where does the line y = 2x + 1 meet the line y = x + 4?" The answer depends on how those two lines relate to each other.
In the first graph, the two lines cross at exactly one point. That crossing point gives you the one solution. In the second graph, the lines are parallel — they have the same slope but different y-intercepts, so they never meet. That means no solution. In the third graph, the two lines are the exact same line stacked on top of each other. Every single point on the line is a solution, so there are infinitely many solutions.
Let's look at the general pattern. When you take any linear equation in one variable and simplify it — distributing, combining like terms, moving all the x terms to one side and all the numbers to the other — you'll end up in one of three situations.
For example, if you simplify an equation and get 5x = 20, you divide both sides by 5 to find x = 4. There is exactly one solution.
This happens when both sides of the equation have the same variable term but different constant terms. For instance, if you simplify and get 0 = 7, that's never true. No solution exists.
This happens when both sides of the equation are identical after simplifying. If you get 0 = 0, that's always true — no matter what number you plug in for x. That means there are infinitely many solutions.
Let's look at specific examples of each type and walk through the simplification process. Pay close attention to what happens to the variable terms on each side of the equation.
Follow this flowchart every time. First, simplify both sides. Then move all the x terms to one side. If x is still there, divide to find your one answer. If x vanishes, check whether the remaining statement is true or false.
| Type | Example Equation | After Simplifying | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| One Solution | 3x + 2 = 14 | x = 4 | Exactly one answer |
| One Solution | 2(x − 3) = x + 1 | x = 7 | Exactly one answer |
| No Solution | x + 5 = x + 9 | 5 = 9 ✗ | False — no answer |
| No Solution | 4(x + 1) = 4x − 3 | 4 = −3 ✗ | False — no answer |
| Infinitely Many | 2x + 6 = 2(x + 3) | 6 = 6 ✓ | True — all numbers work |
| Infinitely Many | 3(x − 1) + 3 = 3x | 0 = 0 ✓ | True — all numbers work |
Notice the pattern in the "No Solution" rows: the variable terms on both sides are identical (like x on both sides, or 4x on both sides), but the constant terms are different. In the "Infinitely Many" rows, both the variable terms and the constant terms turn out to be identical.
Let's solve three equations step-by-step — one of each type — so you can see exactly how the process works.
5(x − 2) + 3 = 2x + 55x − 10 + 3 = 2x + 55x − 7 = 2x + 53x − 7 = 53x = 12 → x = 43(2x + 4) = 6x − 16x + 12 = 6x − 112 = −14(x + 2) − 3 = 2(2x + 1) + 34x + 8 − 3 = 4x + 2 + 34x + 5 = 4x + 55 = 5Let's put all three types side by side to see the differences clearly. This table is like a cheat sheet for identifying what kind of equation you're working with.
| Feature | One Solution | No Solution | Infinitely Many |
|---|---|---|---|
| What you see after simplifying | x = a number | False statement (e.g., 0 = 7) | True statement (e.g., 0 = 0) |
| Variable terms | Different on each side | Same on each side | Same on each side |
| Constant terms | Can be anything | Different on each side | Same on each side |
| Graph meaning | Lines cross once | Lines are parallel | Lines are the same |
| Math name | Conditional equation | Contradiction | Identity |
| How many answers? | Exactly 1 | 0 | All real numbers (∞) |
The most important thing to notice is this: the difference between "no solution" and "infinitely many solutions" comes down to the constants. In both cases, the variable terms cancel out. But if the remaining constants match, the equation is always true. If they don't match, it's never true.
Understanding the three types of solutions for one-variable equations sets you up for much bigger ideas in math. In high school, you'll study systems of equations — that's when you have two equations with two variables (like x and y) and need to find values that make both true at the same time. Guess what? Systems of equations also have the same three possible outcomes!
| Concept | One Variable (This Lesson) | Two Variables (Coming Soon) |
|---|---|---|
| One Solution | Variable = one specific number | Two lines cross at one point |
| No Solution | False statement (contradiction) | Two parallel lines |
| Infinitely Many | True statement (identity) | Two identical lines |
| How to detect | Simplify and check what remains | Compare slopes and y-intercepts |
You'll also use these ideas in inequalities, where instead of "equals," you have "greater than" or "less than." And later in algebra, when equations get more complex, the skill of simplifying and recognizing contradictions or identities stays exactly the same. The foundation you're building right now is one you'll use for years.
Another connection: in functions, finding the solution to an equation like f(x) = g(x) means finding where two function graphs intersect. The same three outcomes apply — the graphs might cross once, never cross, or overlap completely.
Try these five problems on your own. Simplify each equation and determine whether it has one solution, no solution, or infinitely many solutions. Click "Show Answer" when you're ready to check your work.
7x − 3 = 4x + 9. How many solutions does it have?2(3x + 5) = 6x + 10.8 + 2m = 5 + 2m, where m is the number of movies you watch. Will there ever be a month where both services cost the same amount?3(x + 2) = 3x + k have infinitely many solutions. Then find a different value of k that makes it have no solution. Explain why no value of k gives exactly one solution.Every linear equation in one variable falls into one of three categories when you simplify it. If the variable survives the simplification process, you'll find exactly one solution — a single value of x that makes the equation true. If the variable cancels out and leaves behind a false statement like 5 = 3, the equation is a contradiction with no solution — nothing you plug in can ever make it work. If the variable cancels out and leaves behind a true statement like 0 = 0, the equation is an identity with infinitely many solutions — every number works because both sides were really the same expression all along.
The key to identifying the type is to simplify fully — distribute, combine like terms, and collect variables on one side. Then look at what remains. On a graph, these three outcomes correspond to two lines crossing, two parallel lines, or two identical lines. This concept is foundational for everything from systems of equations to functions and beyond.