To work out the equation of a straight line a pair of coordinates are needed or a coordinate and its slope.
But in general when lines are parallel to each other on the Cartesian plane they have the same slope but with different y intercepts.
The equation in slope-intercept form of a line that is parallel to a given line can be written as y = mx + b, where m is the slope of the given line and b is the y-intercept. However, since the slope is not provided in the question, the equation cannot be determined.
The given expression is not an equation because it has no equality sign but for a line to be parallel to another line they both will have the same slope but with different y intercepts
The equation for the given points is y = x+4 in slope intercept form
4x+y = 14 will be parallel to the above equation because the slope or gradient remains the same but the y intercept changes.
Without an equality sign the given expression can't be considered to be a straight line equation. But if you mean: y = 2x-1 then the parallel equation is y = 2x+5
Any equation parallel to the x-axis is of the form:y = constant In this case, you can figure out the constant from the given point.
Write an equation in slope-intercept form for the line that passes through the given point and is parallel to the given line (-7,3); x=4
Write the equation of a line in slope-intercept form that has a slope of -2 and passes through the point (2, -8).
The equation is x = -7.
The given expression is not an equation because it has no equality sign but for a line to be parallel to another line they both will have the same slope but with different y intercepts
Parallel straight line equations have the same slope but with different y intercepts
The equation for the given points is y = x+4 in slope intercept form
Here is how to solve it. First, find the slope of the given line. To do this, solve the equation for "y". That will convert the equation to the slope-intercept form. From there, you can immediately read off the slope. Since parallel lines have the same slope, the line you are looking for will have the same slope. Now you need to use the point-slope form of the equation, with the given point, and the slope you just calculated. Finally, solve this equation for "y" to bring it into the requested slope-intercept form.
y = -3x + 7 is an equation which gives us a line parallel to the line y = -3x + 1, or the line -3x - 1. The equation given represents the slope-intercept form of the equation for a line. Slope-intercept takes the form y = mx + b. In this form the the value of m represents the slope of the line, while b represents the Y intercept. All lines with the same slope are parallel (unless they're exactly the same.) So to find a parallel line, we simply adjust the Y intercept to any value other than the one given.
4x+y = 14 will be parallel to the above equation because the slope or gradient remains the same but the y intercept changes.
plug in the slope(m) and coordinates (x,y) into the slope-intercept formula & solve for b.slope-intercept formula: y=mx+b
Without an equality sign the given expression can't be considered to be a straight line equation. But if you mean: y = 2x-1 then the parallel equation is y = 2x+5
Any equation parallel to the x-axis is of the form:y = constant In this case, you can figure out the constant from the given point.