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Every problem has a solution, otherwise it would not be a problem. If you get stuck, reframe the problem. Ask yourself why, what, where, whom.. in other words, figure out the true nature of the problem and why it exists. Is it really a problem or did your expectations for the result changed? There is no single answer here but keep asking questions and you will figure it out eventually.


Many problems provably don't have a solution. OP didn't specify a problem domain but in both maths and computing the possibility that what you are trying to achieve is mathematically impossible is a real one, and distinguishing the absence of a solution from your own lack of ability to find the solution that does exist is a real challenge with no easy answer.


Real-life problems always have a solution, but sometimes it isn't a technical one. Or a technical solutions exist, but is too expensive. To take your math example, e(x) = 0 have no solution, but in real life, taking x = -100 could be close enough for your purpose.


In real life problems often have multiple solutions and we don't like some of them, possibly the simplest ones. This is much like exceedingly expensive solutions to technical problems. In my experience customers faced with a costly solution reframe their problem and accept to do their business a different way. Their customers won't notice.


We lost the secret key for this bitcoin in the incinerator, can we get the key back?

That problem has neither a theoretical nor a practical solution.


There is a human one though: accept the loss and add processes to not repeat the mistake.

That what I was talking about in my first sentence, but my post wasn't clear, I admit. Thank you, it helped me clarify.


It's not clear that _every_ problem has a solution.

NP=P? There are many other famous math problems. No one found solutions yet and it is also unclear whether one is able to find a solution. And it's unclear if there is even a solution.




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