Such an equation can be written in several standard forms; here are two of them:
Ax + By + C = 0
y = mx + b (that's the "slope-intercept form")
This is a straight line graph with the equation, y = n where n is any positive or negative number.
any points along the line described by the equation x=anything will give you a vertical line on a graph
-- The graph of a linear equation is a straight line. -- Any two points on a straight line are enough to completely specify the line, that is, to uniquely identify the line and tell you everything there is to know about it.
Select any value for one of the variables in the graph and solve the equation to get the other variable.
The graph of the equation y=8 is a horizontal line through the y-intercept of 8. This is because since y=8, any point on the graph will have a y-coordinate of 8. This is why it is a horizontal line through (0,8).
Any type of graph is a pictorial representation of data values. A continuous line graph, such as a curve or a parabola, may represent a variable equation.
Solve the line equation for "y", to get it in slope-intercept form. You can immediately read the slope from this equation.Divide -1 by (slope of this first line) to get the slope of the second line - the one perpendicular to the given line. Write an equation for any line with this slope.
y = - 1/3 x + any number.
A linear equation, when plotted, must be a straight line. Such a restriction does not apply to a line graph.y = ax2 + bx +c, where a is non-zero gives a line graph in the shape of a parabola. It is a quadratic graph, not linear. Similarly, there are line graphs for other polynomials, power or exponential functions, logarithmic or trigonometric functions, or any combination of them.
Yes, because you can rewrite it as: y = -x/10 Which is a line. When you graph the above equation, the graph passes the vertical line test - meaning that the graph never intersects with any vertical line more than once.
No. If you graph it, it doesn't. No line is horizontal unless the equation is y=A, where A is any real number.
title axis labels units don't know any more but I hope that helps.... Equation of line.