To identify the slope in a linear equation, rearrange the equation into the form y = mx + b. The term m is the slope.
Write the equation in slope-intercept form of the line that has a slope of 2 and contains the point (1, 1).
It is not an equation because it doesn't have an equal sign in it so to write it in slope-intercept form is impossible
Slope intercept is an equation of the form y=mx+b where m is the slope and b is the y-intercept.
It is slope intercept form. The equation for slope intercept form is y=mx+b which is like your equation y=5x+6
y = 2x + 1.
You can write it either in standard form (ax + by = c) or in slope-intercept form (y = mx + b)
y=mx+b y0=mx0+b 5=3*2+b b=5-5=0 y=3x+0
The equation of the line is of the form y = 3x + c where c is a constant. The point (4,9) is on the line, so substituting x=4, y=9 in the equation, 9 = 3*4 + c = 12 + c so c = -3 So the equation of the line is y = 3x - 3
The slope-intercept form of an equation is y = mx + b, where m is the slope and b is the y-intercept. Without the specific equation, it is not possible to determine the values of m and b for the slope-intercept form.
slopeintercept equations are used to find the slope and intercept (obviously lol) they are set up like this y=mx+b m is the slope and b is the y-intercept lets say you have an equation like... 2x + y = 5 (now minus 2x from both sides) 2x - 2x + y = 5 - 2x (simplify) y = 5 - 2x just use algebra to turn the standard form to slope intercept form
When it is a line through the origin.
Slope-intercept form is easy! The equation is y=mx+b (X)(X) O______O
To identify the slope in a linear equation, rearrange the equation into the form y = mx + b. The term m is the slope.
The general form of the slope-intercept equation is y = mx + b. In that equation, the slope is m and the y intercept is b.
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.
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