The question refers to "this equation". In such circumstances would it be too much to expect that you make sure that there is some equation that is following?
O=O Sure.
A linear equation looks like any other equation. It is made up of two expressions set equal to each other. A linear equation is special because: It has one or two variables. No variable in a linear equation is raised to a power greater than 1 or used as the denominator of a fraction. When you find pairs of values that make the linear equation true and plot those pairs on a coordinate grid, all of the points for any one equation lie on the same line. Linear equations graph as straight lines.
A negative x coordinate would make you move left, and a negative y coordinate would make you move down.
x2+(y-x2/3)2=1
They are all the pairs you make where (x = any number) and (y = 4).
The relation between two different ordered pairs which have the same first coordinate is simply that. They have the same first coordinate. If you mark the two points on graph paper, you find that one always lies directly above or below the other. The relationship is that they both belong to the family of points which make up a particular vertical line.
An equation with an undefined slope is typically in the form x = a, where 'a' is a constant number. This indicates a vertical line on the coordinate plane, where every point on the line has the same x-coordinate and no defined slope because the line is perfectly vertical.
The most obvious is to plot relationships between one quantity and another. If for every thing you sell, you make 3 dollars, then you could express that as the equation y=3x and plot that using the Cartesian coordinate system. (where y would represent dollars and x would represent items sold)
There are many different ordered pairs for this. To figure it out, make up a value for x. Then plug it into the equation and solve to find y. You can use any number. For example, if x=2, then your equation would be 3(2)+1. Solve that and you get 7 for the answer (y). if x=2, then y=7 so one of the ordered pairs would be (2,7).
If you need to knit 2 dozen pairs of socks, and each pair uses 105g of yarn, your question is how much yarn is needed. This is really a math question, I would guess. First off, you need to make 24 pairs (2dozen) of socks, and each pair uses 105g of yarn. Therefore, your equation would be: 24 pairs multiplied by 105g would equal the number of grams of yarn you would need to complete your project. Written as an equation you have: 24pair x 105g/pair = x 24 x 105g = x comment: pair/pair nullifies that item, leaving the g-grams-left in the equation 2520g = x therefore you would need 2520grams of yarn to make your 24 pair of socks
The number of pairs of jeans that would make a kilo depends on the weight of each pair. On average, a pair of jeans weighs around 0.5 to 1.5 pounds (0.23 to 0.68 kg), so it would take roughly 2 to 4 pairs of jeans to make a kilo.