Of course not. The graph can cross the y-axis anywhere ... fraction, mixed number,
whole number, or zero, and there are even some graphs that don't cross the y-axis
anywhere.
y=mx+b (b is the y-intercept, and m is the slope)
X + Y = 4. The standard form of a linear equation that makes the slope and Y-intercept obvious is: Y = (slope)X + (intercept). Re-arrange the given equation: Y = -X + 4 It's now in the standard form, and we can directly see that: Slope = -1 and Y-intercept = 4
If the mixed number is x y/z then the improper fraction is (xz + y)/z
The graph is translated upwards.
4x + 2y = -8 → 2y = -4x - 8 → y = -2x - 4
6
yes For example if y = 3x - 1 and 3/4 x intercept is 1 and 3/4, a mixed number
12
If the slope-intercept equation is in the form: y = mx + b then the y-coordinate of the intercept is b
y=mx+b in slope intercept form m=slope b=y-intercept
The y-intercept is -5. 2x - 3y = 15 -3y = -2x + 15 y = 2/3x - 5 the y-intercept is the number in slope intercept form that does not have a variable, the minus sign makes the intercept negative.
the y-intercept is when u start or when you cross the y line
It is in slope intercept form. The slope is 0 and the y-intercept is -2.
An intercept is where the graph crosses an axis.A line in slope-intercept form is in the form y = ax + b, where "a" is the slope, and "b" is the y-intercept. For example, if y = 3x -4, the slope of the line is 3, and it crosses the y-axis at -4.
y=0x+6 simplified y=6 the number in front of the x is the slope. This is the form y=mx+b
Slope-Intercept Form: y = -2x +1
When in the Y-intercept form. Y=mx+b Y is the y-coordinate m is the slope X is the x-coordinate b is the y-intercept