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==Inconsistent and indeterminate cases== A system of equations is said to be [[inconsistent equations|inconsistent]] when there are no solutions and it is called [[indeterminate system|indeterminate]] when there is more than one solution. For linear equations, an indeterminate system will have infinitely many solutions (if it is over an infinite field), since the solutions can be expressed in terms of one or more parameters that can take arbitrary values. Cramer's rule applies to the case where the coefficient determinant is nonzero. In the 2Γ2 case, if the coefficient determinant is zero, then the system is inconsistent if the numerator determinants are nonzero, or indeterminate if the numerator determinants are zero. For 3Γ3 or higher systems, the only thing one can say when the coefficient determinant equals zero is that if any of the numerator determinants are nonzero, then the system must be inconsistent. However, having all determinants zero does not imply that the system is indeterminate. A simple example where all determinants vanish (equal zero) but the system is still inconsistent is the 3Γ3 system ''x''+''y''+''z''=1, ''x''+''y''+''z''=2, ''x''+''y''+''z''=3.
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