A linear equation.
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∙ 10y agoAX + BY is not an equation .AX + BY + C = 0is the general equation for a straight line.
ax+by=c
Ax + By = C
Solve the equation for y - that is, manipulate it so that "y" is on the left, everything else on the right. This will give you an equation of the form y = ax + b, where a is the slope, and b is the y-intercept.
it's the bit in the square root sqrt of (b squared minus 4ac) when a,b and c are the values belonging to the equation ax(sqared) plus bx plus c
a function
y = (c - Ax) / (B)
A linear equation ?
AX + BY is not an equation .AX + BY + C = 0is the general equation for a straight line.
x = (d-a)/(a-c)
ax + by = cThe graph if that equation is a straight line whose slope is (-a/b)and whose y-intercept is (c/b).
The equation contains variables which are only raised to the first power.
Only one. x = (c - b) / a
The equation ax2 + bx + c = 0, where a != 0 is called quadratic.
[ Ax + By = C ] If 'A', 'B', and 'C' are numbers, then the graph is always a straight line, and the equation is a "linear" one.
Assuming the question is about chemical reactions (rather than mathematics where it is placed), it is a double displacement.
Yes. This is because the rate of change is equal to a (i.e. the slope is a). a never changes, so its linear.