When the equation is in the form "y = mx + c" the intercept is given by 'c' (and the gradient by 'm'): 3x + 3y = 9 ⇒ x + y = 3 ⇒ y = -x + 3 ⇒ Intercept is 3 (And the gradient is -1)
An equation such as y = mx + c is said to be in standard form. From such an equation, Gradient = coefficient of x = 3
The gradient (slope) of 3y = 4x+5 is 4/33y = 4x+5y = 4/3x+5/3y=mx+c(m = gradient)mx+c = 4/3x+5/3m = 4/3
It is a straight line with gradient -A/B and intercept C/B.
If a line has equation y = mx + c, the perpendicular line has gradient -1/m A line perpendicular to 3x + y = 2 has equation 3y = x + c; the value for c will be determined by a point through which the line must pass.
x^2 + 3x + 7 = 6x + 18 x^2 - 3x - 11 = 0
x2-5-4x2+3x = 0 -3x2+3x-5 = 0 or as 3x2-3x+5 = 0
that isn't a question lol, but you can work out alot about a straight line from that. as Y=mx+c where m = gradient (steepness) and c = intercept point (place where the line crosses the Y axis) m = 3 and c = 1
It is: 3x2+6x-11 = 0
3x + y = c where c is any constant number of your choice.
the answer is a
When the equation is given in the standard form: y = mx + c, the gradient is m. So here, y = 7x + 2 means m, the gradient, is 7.