If you mean points of (5, 8) and (3, 9) then the slope works out as -1/2
The line is vertical and so the slope is undefined.
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
7
If you mean: (2, 13) and (-4, -11) then the slope is 4 and both equations will have the same slope of 4 but with different y intercepts
"14" is not a point; you need two coordinates to specify a point.
The line is vertical and so the slope is undefined.
Write the equation of a line in slope-intercept form that has a slope of -2 and passes through the point (2, -8).
33
Y=mx+b
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
(0,5).
7
If: slope is 3 and point is (1, 4) Then: y = 3x+1
If: slope is 3 and point is (1, 4) Then: y = 3x+1
To write the point-slope equation of a line that passes through the point (5, 5), you need a slope (m) as well. The point-slope form is given by the equation ( y - y_1 = m(x - x_1) ). If the slope is not provided, you can express the equation generically as ( y - 5 = m(x - 5) ), where ( m ) is the slope of the line. If you have a specific slope, you can substitute it into the equation.
yes because you will need the slope and y-intercept to find the equation of a line and the point through which the line passes is the y-intercept so it is yes!!!!!!! Good Luck!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Slope=8 point=(-7,3)