that's not possible to work out from that, firstly you need y and x and, secondly, as the equation of a line is an equation, you need something to equal something else, e.g y=mx+c
It shows the relationship of y in terms of x. [y = (yIntercept) + ((slope)*(x))] [slope = (y2 - y1)/(x2 - x1)]
There is no slope nor intercept because there is no equation, simply an expression.
It is y1-y2=m(x1-x2). m is the slope of the line. The point should be where the 2nd y2 and x2 are. Ex: slope = 5 (3,-4) The answer to this would be: y+4=5(x-3)
the formula for slope is m=(x2-x1)/(y2-y1) (3,5) and (6,5) x1=3 y1=5 x2=6 y2=5 m=(6-5)/(5-5) you can't divide by zero so the slope would be undefined
If you mean points of (7, 2) and (3, 5) then the slope is -3/4
slope, m = y2 - y1/ x2 - x1 = 5 -5/ 5 - (-4) = 0/9 => m = 0
Slope= y2-y1 /x2-x1
you get slope when you take 2 points from a graph and divide y2 - y1 by x2 - x1. example: Compute the slope of the line between graph points (13,4) and (6,9). y2 - y1 = 9 - 4 = 5, x2 - x1 = 6 - 13 = -7, so the slope is 5/-7 (five over negative seven)
Points: (x1, y1) and (x2, y2) Slope: y1-y2/x1-x2
The slope between two points, (x1, y1) and (x2, y2) is: (y1 - y2) / (x1 - x2)
Points: (x, y) and (x2, y2) Slope = y2-y divided by x2-x
It is not possible to answer this question because the line y2 is not identified.