If you mean: y = mx+b then it is in slope intercept form
If you mean y = mx + b then it is known as the standard form or the slope-intercept form.
The equation y = mx + b is the equation for a line in slope-intercept form. The slope is m, and the y-axis intercept is b.
That is called slope - intercept form
That's it, just the way you said it:y = mx + b'm' is the slope'b' is the intercept
It is the equation of a straight line
If you mean y = mx + b then it is known as the standard form or the slope-intercept form.
The equation y = mx + b is the equation for a line in slope-intercept form. The slope is m, and the y-axis intercept is b.
A linear equation in the slope intercept form or the standard form.
That is called slope - intercept form
The equation y = mx + b is the equation for a line in slope intercept form, with m being the slope, and b being the y-axis intercept.
That's it, just the way you said it:y = mx + b'm' is the slope'b' is the intercept
It is the equation of a straight line
It is slope intercept form. The equation for slope intercept form is y=mx+b which is like your equation y=5x+6
The equation of the line is written in the standard form, y = mx+c
Yes it is, since it can be represented in the form y = mx + b
Yes, that is the slope intercept form of the equation for a straight line.
An equation such as y = mx + c is said to be in standard form. From such an equation, Gradient = coefficient of x = 3