No.
y = 5x + 1 is nota direct variation.y = 5x + 1 is nota direct variation.y = 5x + 1 is nota direct variation.y = 5x + 1 is nota direct variation.
The equation ( y = 4x + 1 ) is not a direct variation. In a direct variation, the relationship can be expressed in the form ( y = kx ), where ( k ) is a constant and there is no constant term added or subtracted. Since this equation includes the constant term ( +1 ), it does not meet the criteria for direct variation.
y=3x is a direct variation in that y varies directly with x by a factor of 3. Any linear equation (a polynomial of degree 1, which is a polynomial equation with a highest exponent of 1), is a direct variation of y to x by some constant, and this constant is simply the coefficient of the "x" term. Other examples: y=(1/2)x is a direct variation, and the constant of variation is 1/2 y=-9x is a direct variation, and the constant of variation is -9
1
No, direct variation is "y=ax." In direct variation a equals any real constant, b=1, and c must equal zero. If any of thee conditions are changed, it is not direct variation.
y = 5x + 1 is nota direct variation.y = 5x + 1 is nota direct variation.y = 5x + 1 is nota direct variation.y = 5x + 1 is nota direct variation.
If a variable X is in inverse variation with a variable Y, then it is in direct variation with the variable (1/Y).
The equation ( y = 4x + 1 ) is not a direct variation. In a direct variation, the relationship can be expressed in the form ( y = kx ), where ( k ) is a constant and there is no constant term added or subtracted. Since this equation includes the constant term ( +1 ), it does not meet the criteria for direct variation.
y=3x is a direct variation in that y varies directly with x by a factor of 3. Any linear equation (a polynomial of degree 1, which is a polynomial equation with a highest exponent of 1), is a direct variation of y to x by some constant, and this constant is simply the coefficient of the "x" term. Other examples: y=(1/2)x is a direct variation, and the constant of variation is 1/2 y=-9x is a direct variation, and the constant of variation is -9
1
No, direct variation is "y=ax." In direct variation a equals any real constant, b=1, and c must equal zero. If any of thee conditions are changed, it is not direct variation.
There is only one equation that is given in the question and that equation is not a direct variation.
No. For direct variation, any order pair with a 0 in it MUST be (0,0).
Y=1/x
No, it does not.
y=x/7 y=(1/7) x It is a direct variation since it is of the form y=kx, where k=1/7 , a constant
1 ITApad sa 1=11 hehehehehe