Let the equation of the line be y = mx + c
The slope is 5 so m = 5
ie y = 5x + c
The point (3,2) is on the line so substitute x = 3, y = 2 in this equation to give:
2 = 5*3 + c
or
2=15+c
Then subtract 15 off both sides as to calculate c.
2-15=-13
so that c = -13
Therefore the equation is y = 5x - 13
Assuming the point is (3, -6) and the slope 1, the equation is x - y - 9 = 0
That will depend on the value of the slope which has not been given.
Two sets of points are needed to determine the slope of a line
If you mean a slope of -5 and a point of (6, 3) then the equation is y = -5x+33
35
Assuming the point is (3, -6) and the slope 1, the equation is x - y - 9 = 0
If the slope is 7 and the coordinate is (8, 5) then the straight line equation is y=7x-51
That will depend on the value of the slope which has not been given.
Two sets of points are needed to determine the slope of a line
Which of the following is the point-slope equation of the line with a slope equals -4 and a point of -2 3?
If you mean a slope of -5 and a point of (6, 3) then the equation is y = -5x+33
35
no it is different
If you mean: slope of -13 and point of (5, 7) then the equation is y = -13x+72
If you mean slope of -10 and point of (1, 4) then the equation is y = -10x+14
Point: (-6, -2) Slope: 5 Equation: y = 5x+28
if a line has a slope of -2 and a point on the line has coordinates of (3, -5) write an equation for the line in point slope form