Yes beccause: (y1-y2)/(x1-x2) = gradient
If the line passing through these points is a straight line then it has a positive gradient.
Points cannot be parallel to other points. A straight line joining two points is parallel to a straight line joining another pair of points if the gradient (slope) of the two lines is the same.
The gradient of a line is the same as the slope of a line. It will tell someone measuring the line how straight the line is.
It is the gradient (slope) of the line.
The gradient of the straight line
If the line passing through these points is a straight line then it has a positive gradient.
Points cannot be parallel to other points. A straight line joining two points is parallel to a straight line joining another pair of points if the gradient (slope) of the two lines is the same.
The gradient of a straight line cannot be defined- it's infinity.
If you mean points of (1, 3) and (4, 3) then the gradient is 0 and it is a horizontal straight line parallel to the x axis on the Cartesian plane.
The gradient of a line is the same as the slope of a line. It will tell someone measuring the line how straight the line is.
. the equation of a straight line can be found by using two points on a line . First find the gradient of the line using the gradient formula . now substitute the gradient into general form replacing "m" . use one of the points and substitute into equation to solve "c" example 1: find the equation of the line which passes through the points (1,3) and (2,5). step 1: find the gradient M=5-3/2-1=2 (/=divide) step 2: place m into the equation Y=2x+c step 3: substitute point into equation 3=2(1)+c step 4: solve C=1 equation is Y=2x+1 hope that helps :)
It is the gradient (slope) of the line.
Gradient
The gradient of the straight line
gradient
no. you tell me. why is this not on the internet.
A straight line, through the origin, with a gradient of 1/2.