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Systems of Linear Equations
Systems of Linear Equations

... First we just put z = t since it can be any real number. Now solve for y in terms of z. Now sub it −t for y in first equation and solve for x in terms of t. The solution is (1 − t , −t , t) where t is any real number. For example: Let z be 1. Then (0 , −1 , 1) would be a solution. Notice is works in ...
document
document

Write the equation of the line… Solve by Graphing
Write the equation of the line… Solve by Graphing

Section 2.6 - Gordon State College
Section 2.6 - Gordon State College

2 - O`donovan Academy
2 - O`donovan Academy

... ONE STEP EQUATIONS To solve one step equations, you need to ask three questions about the equation: • What is the variable? • What operation is performed on the variable? • What is the inverse operation? (The one that will undo what is being done to the variable) ...
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Document

Solving Linear Systems by Linear Combinations
Solving Linear Systems by Linear Combinations

Example
Example

... 1. On a single set of coordinate axes, graph each equation. Label the equation of each line. 2. Find the coordinates of the point where the graphs intersect. These coordinates give the solution of the system. Label this point. 3. If the graphs have no point in common, the system has no solution. 4. ...
Solving Systems by Graphing or Substitution.
Solving Systems by Graphing or Substitution.

4.1 Systems of Linear Equations in two variables
4.1 Systems of Linear Equations in two variables

CHS-Soar - AGI conferences
CHS-Soar - AGI conferences

... The Second Conference on Artificial General Intelligence, AGI-09 ...
The first two cases are called consistent since there
The first two cases are called consistent since there

Equations with Many Solutions or No Solution
Equations with Many Solutions or No Solution

... Tell whether each equation has one, zero, or infinitely many solutions. The first one has been done for you. Solve the equation if it has one solution. ...
1.2ppt
1.2ppt

2.4 - UConn Math
2.4 - UConn Math

Lecture Notes for Section 5.1
Lecture Notes for Section 5.1

systems-equations
systems-equations

... We need to eliminate (get rid of) a variable. To simply add this time will not eliminate a variable. If there was a –2x in the 1st equation, the x’s would be eliminated when we add. So we will multiply the 1st equation by a – 2. ...
X - Al Akhawayn University
X - Al Akhawayn University

... Resolution: an inference principle that allows inferred propositions to be computed from given propositions ...
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... is planting at a rate of 32 bulbs per hour. In how many hours will Jon and Sara have planted the same number of bulbs? How many bulbs will that be? ...
Differential Equations A differential equation is an
Differential Equations A differential equation is an

Solving Two Equations in Two Unknowns
Solving Two Equations in Two Unknowns

System of Equations
System of Equations

Systems of Equations
Systems of Equations

Lesson 4
Lesson 4

< 1 ... 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 ... 33 >

Unification (computer science)

Unification, in computer science and logic, is an algorithmic process of solving equations between symbolic expressions.Depending on which expressions (also called terms) are allowed to occur in an equation set (also called unification problem), and which expressions are considered equal, several frameworks of unification are distinguished. If higher-order variables, that is, variables representing functions, are allowed in an expression, the process is called higher-order unification, otherwise first-order unification. If a solution is required to make both sides of each equation literally equal, the process is called syntactical unification, otherwise semantical, or equational unification, or E-unification, or unification modulo theory.A solution of a unification problem is denoted as a substitution, that is, a mapping assigning a symbolic value to each variable of the problem's expressions. A unification algorithm should compute for a given problem a complete, and minimal substitution set, that is, a set covering all its solutions, and containing no redundant members. Depending on the framework, a complete and minimal substitution set may have at most one, at most finitely many, or possibly infinitely many members, or may not exist at all. In some frameworks it is generally impossible to decide whether any solution exists. For first-order syntactical unification, Martelli and Montanari gave an algorithm that reports unsolvability or computes a complete and minimal singleton substitution set containing the so-called most general unifier.For example, using x,y,z as variables, the singleton equation set { cons(x,cons(x,nil)) = cons(2,y) } is a syntactic first-order unification problem that has the substitution { x ↦ 2, y ↦ cons(2,nil) } as its only solution.The syntactic first-order unification problem { y = cons(2,y) } has no solution over the set of finite terms; however, it has the single solution { y ↦ cons(2,cons(2,cons(2,...))) } over the set of infinite trees.The semantic first-order unification problem { a⋅x = x⋅a } has each substitution of the form { x ↦ a⋅...⋅a } as a solution in a semigroup, i.e. if (⋅) is considered associative; the same problem, viewed in an abelian group, where (⋅) is considered also commutative, has any substitution at all as a solution.The singleton set { a = y(x) } is a syntactic second-order unification problem, since y is a function variable.One solution is { x ↦ a, y ↦ (identity function) }; another one is { y ↦ (constant function mapping each value to a), x ↦ (any value) }.The first formal investigation of unification can be attributed to John Alan Robinson, who used first-order syntactical unification as a basic building block of his resolution procedure for first-order logic, a great step forward in automated reasoning technology, as it eliminated one source of combinatorial explosion: searching for instantiation of terms. Today, automated reasoning is still the main application area of unification.Syntactical first-order unification is used in logic programming and programming language type system implementation, especially in Hindley–Milner based type inference algorithms.Semantic unification is used in SMT solvers and term rewriting algorithms.Higher-order unification is used in proof assistants, for example Isabelle and Twelf, and restricted forms of higher-order unification (higher-order pattern unification) are used in some programming language implementations, such as lambdaProlog, as higher-order patterns are expressive, yet their associated unification procedure retains theoretical properties closer to first-order unification.
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