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SOLVE-ONLY one solution

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SYML2nd
SYML2nd on 17 Feb 2023
Commented: Walter Roberson on 19 Feb 2023
I am trying to solve a system of two equations which I know they intersect in three points. I am using this code (which I simplified)
syms x y
[x_sol,y_sol] = solve(Eqn1,Eqn);
Why it displays only the first solution and not the three solutions?
  2 Comments
Torsten
Torsten on 17 Feb 2023
Maybe if we knew the equations and the code you use, we could give an answer.
Torsten
Torsten on 19 Feb 2023
Use
[x_sol, y_sol] = vpasolve([a*exp(-b*x) == y, c*x^3 + d*x^2 + e*x + f == y], [x, y]);
instead of
[x_sol, y_sol] = solve([a*exp(-b*x) == y, c*x^3 + d*x^2 + e*x + f == y], [x, y]);

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Accepted Answer

Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson on 17 Feb 2023
solve() will return multiple solutions only if the equations are simultaneous multinomials -- though in some cases it is able to convert trig equations into internal polynomials.
It does not even return multiple solutions to equations involving exp() in terms of the LambertW function when those are available.
In all other cases, it will return a single closed-form solution if it can find one, and otherwise a single numeric solution.
In some cases, especially ones involving trig functions, it is able to compute parameterized additional solutions, if you request 'returnconditions', true
  2 Comments
SYML2nd
SYML2nd on 19 Feb 2023
Edited: SYML2nd on 19 Feb 2023
I tried but it does not work. Does it exists an other method (not using 'solve' maybe) that does not have this problem?
Thanks
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson on 19 Feb 2023
You could try solving iteratively, solve one equation for one variable, substitute the result into the remaining equations, and so on. Depending on what the equations are like, you might find a step for which there are multiple solutions, in which case you can iterate over all of the possibilities, hoping that they will lead to valid solutions.
Unfortunately it does not take all that much before formulas are too complicated to make progress on.

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