Stage 12 · Inequalities

12.4  Systems of Inequalities

Several conditions that must all hold at once — the answer is where their stretches overlap.

For ages 13–15 · Intuition before notation
Knowledge point page

Point 1 of 4 in this lesson: 12.4.1 Several conditions, all at once

12.4.1 Several conditions, all at once

Think back to an ordinary inequality like x > 2. It draws a line in the sand: every number to the right of 2 passes, everything else fails. Now imagine a second rule arrives — x < 6. To satisfy both, a number has to clear the first hurdle and the second. That little word and is the whole story of this lesson.

When two or more inequalities must hold together, we collect them with a big curly brace and call the bundle a system of inequalities:

2x − 1 > 3 x − 2 < 4 both must hold at the same time
The brace is shorthand for "and." A value is a solution of the system only if it satisfies every line at once.

This is the same brace you met in Stage 10 when you solved systems of equations — but the meaning is even more natural here. With equations, you hunted for the rare point that landed on both lines. With inequalities, each condition already allows a whole stretch of the line, so the system simply asks: which numbers are inside every stretch?

Key idea

A system means AND, never "or." Its solution set is the collection of values that make all the inequalities true together — the part the conditions share.

Watch out

"And" is stricter than each piece alone. Adding a second condition can only shrink the set of survivors, never grow it. If you ever end up with more numbers than one inequality allowed by itself, something has gone wrong.

🎮 Try it AND vs OR — who survives?

A number rolls in. Inequality A wants x > 2; inequality B wants x < 6. Slide the number and watch which conditions it passes — and whether it survives the system (an "and").

x = 4
eastmath.com · 12.4 Systems of Inequalities · 12.4.1 Several conditions, all at once