There isn't any and that is why the slope of a vertical line is not defined.
Yes.
When run = 0. That is to say, when the line is vertical.
A vertical line is NO SLOPE to ski on. That's how my Algebra teacher taught us to remember it. Slope is rise/run with run=0, so the slope is infinity or "No Slope"
the slope of a vertical line is considered undefined slope in the rise over run. lets say the rise is 5 and the run would be 0 since its a vertical line. therefore your slope would be 5/0 and since you cannot divide by 0, the slope is undefined
It is called the slope of a line.
Yes, but the the line is vertical and the slope (or gradient) is undefined.
love way
A vertical line!
A vertical line has the equation x = C (a constant value), where y has all values, x has only one value, and the slope is undefined (the run, Δx, is zero, so you cannot divide the rise by the run).
The vertical change between two points separated by a horizontal difference of Dx is Dx*slope = Dx*Rise/Run
A horizontal line is perpendicular to a vertical line.