It is the slope of the line as for example y=3x+6 whereas 3 is the slope and 6 is the y intercept.
Your statement is correct. y=mx+b when m is the slope and b is the y-intercept.
The coefficient of the x term gives the gradient of the slope.
x
If you mean the straight line equation of: y = mx+b then m is the slope and b is the y intercept
Select any value for one of the variables in the graph and solve the equation to get the other variable.
slope
27
True.
Your statement is correct. y=mx+b when m is the slope and b is the y-intercept.
The "slope-intercept" form of a line is an equation of the form:y = mx + b The "m" term - the coefficient you are asking for - is the slope of the line. The "b" is the y-intercept.
The "slope-intercept" form of a line is an equation of the form:y = mx + b The "m" term - the coefficient you are asking for - is the slope of the line. The "b" is the y-intercept.
The "slope-intercept" form of a line is an equation of the form:y = mx + b The "m" term - the coefficient you are asking for - is the slope of the line. The "b" is the y-intercept.
The strength of the linear relationship between the two variables in the regression equation is the correlation coefficient, r, and is always a value between -1 and 1, inclusive. The regression coefficient is the slope of the line of the regression equation.
The coefficient of the x term gives the gradient of the slope.
x
Yes, but only when the coefficient of y is 1. For example if the equation of the line is 3y = 2x + 5, then the slope is not 2. The equation has to be re-written as y = 2/3*x + 5/3 whence the slope IS 2/3
false slope of line is co-efficient of x term ,when line equation expressed in standard form y=mx+c