The line x = 4 is a verticle line because, in a standard x-y graph, where x increases to the right and y increases upwards, the graph x = 4 is all points y, where x is 4. That is a verticle line, with infinite slope.
So this would be a verticle line which passes through the point at -3.
There is no y intercept, it is a straight verticle line a x = -6. And technically it has "infinite" slope (1/0), but it is more common to say "No slope".
No, it is horizontal.
That would be because all the graphed values of x are 4. So you can plug anything in for Y and it will still be on that vertical line.
The line x = -4 is vertical, so a line that is perpendicular to it is horizontal, so its slope is 0.
So this would be a verticle line which passes through the point at -3.
Since the line is verticle, the only axis that can define the line is the x-axis. Therefore the equation of a verticle line is always in the form of x=a, where a is some constant. For example, x=1; this means that the verticle line passes through the point (1,0)i.e the x axis at 1.
It is the y-axis and the horizontal line is the x-axis
y=-x+4
Move 3 over the right side of the equation so the equation would be x = -3. The graph of this would be a verticle line at x= -3
There is no y intercept, it is a straight verticle line a x = -6. And technically it has "infinite" slope (1/0), but it is more common to say "No slope".
No, it is horizontal.
That would be because all the graphed values of x are 4. So you can plug anything in for Y and it will still be on that vertical line.
The line x = -4 is vertical, so a line that is perpendicular to it is horizontal, so its slope is 0.
Because X (which in this case is always 4) is the value of the horizontal axis so the only value that can change is Y, the verticle axis.
Y = (X+4) / 2 is a straight line parallel to Y = 0.5 * X
y-intercept: 2 x-intercept: 4