Solved Problems In Digital Electronics

Is there any idiom about the problems so bad that cannot be solved ...

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Is it okay to say “You explanation really solved my concerns"? What are other ways to express this? Thank you!

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"The problem has been solved" is the present perfect tense in the passive voice (it has been solved by someone). In "The problem is solved", "solved" is an adjective describing a state in the present tense. I don't understand your question 2).

What is the tense ot the sentence "The problem has been solved"

In a technical environment, what is the most suitable sentence to use when answering to someone about a problem that they had and we solved it for them: The problem is solved The problem has been s...

The context is solving a mathematical problem. solved with sth - means a problem is tackled using sth method solved for sth - means that a problem is transformed in such way that can sth can be obtained directly (as in "solve for x") My question is, am I missing any meanings, or confusing them?

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As @JohnWaylandBales replied you also have intractable but you were asking for "cannot be solved" not "hard to solve". There is an interesting word for a problem so hard to solve within its (usually implied) rules but so important that someone breaks those rules in order to obtain a solution: a gordian knot problem, cutting the gordian knot.

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It's suitable for when the problem has been solved (there is, then, no problem to solve) and make-work is being done to create the solution where there is no problem. It's not so much implying that there is repetition of solution, though.

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