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The answer depends on what relationship - if any - exists between the points in the table. There need not be any relationship.
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The (x,y) points can be approximated by a linear equation. The (x,y) points are almost linearly related.
A line is made up of many points.
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The answer depends on what relationship - if any - exists between the points in the table. There need not be any relationship.
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Ofwgkta dgaf loiter squad 666
It is a straight line equation in the form of y = mx+c whereas m is the slope and c is the y intercept
The (x,y) points can be approximated by a linear equation. The (x,y) points are almost linearly related.
Assuming you want the equation of the straight line between the two points (x0, y0) and (x1, y1), the equation is: y - y0 = m(x - x0) where m is the gradient between the two points: m = (y1 - y0) ÷ (x1 - x0) Note: if the two x coordinates are equal, that is x0 = x1, then the equation of the line is x = x0.
A line is made up of many points.
"Player" is the independent variable, and "Points" is the dependent variable.
You can follow the following steps. * First, you determine the slope between the two points. Just calculate delta-y / delta-x (that is, difference in y-coordinates, divided by the difference in x-coordinates, between the two points). * Next, you use the point-slope formula, to get an equation for the line. You can use any of the two points for this; each of the points will give you an equation that looks different, but the two equations are equivalent, if you do everything correctly. * Finally, solve the resulting equation for "y"; that will give you the equation in slope-intercept form.
Yes. You need only two points. If A (ax, ay) and B (bx, by) are two points on the line then the gradient (slope) of the line is m = (by - ay)/(bx - ax) provided bx ≠ ax. From this you can calculate m. Then the general slope-intercept form of the equation is y = mx + c Substitute the coordinates of A or B into this equation to find c. If bx = ax then the line is parallel to the y axis and its equation is x = ax. [There are other methods but they are similar to the above]
No, there isn't, as the volume changes when you add the salt. yes but there is a relationship between the two which must be governed by an equation, I've tried plotting some points from salinity tables and it forms a curve but I can't work it back into an equation
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