No because a line can be a vertical line so say you have the equation x=5. Then a vertical line would pass through the x intercept 5 and be vertical thus not having a y intercept. All horizontal lines have a y intercept
There is no slope nor intercept because there is no equation, simply an expression.
A vertical line has neither.
Every line bisector divides a line into two halves: by definition!
Yes, every non-vertical line can be represented by the equation y = mx + b, where m is the slope of the line and b is the y-intercept. The slope of a line represents the rate of change of the line, while the y-intercept is the point where the line intersects the y-axis. Therefore, every non-vertical line has both a slope and a y-intercept.
no
Without the inclusion of an equality sign and not knowing the plus or minus values of the given terms it can't be considered to be a straight line equation
You can write it either in standard form (ax + by = c) or in slope-intercept form (y = mx + b)
There is no slope nor intercept because there is no equation, simply an expression.
It shows the relationship of y in terms of x. [y = (yIntercept) + ((slope)*(x))] [slope = (y2 - y1)/(x2 - x1)]
Every line of latitude is parallel to the equator.
Every line of longitude intersects with every line of latitude and vic-versa.
It is different for every book, every line and indeed every version of the book.
Yes. There can be a line perpendicular to the given line at every point on it, and you know how many different points there are on it ...
jubilee line
No. Every point on a contour line has the same elevation.
line segment
We know that the line passes through points (2, 2) and (0, 10) (since the y-intercept is 10).Using these two points, we can find the slope of the line,m = (10 - 2)/(0 - 2) = 8/-2 = 4/-1 = -4.Now by using the slope, m = -4, and the y-intercept, 10, we can write the equation of the line in the slope-intercept form, y = mx + b which isy = -4x + 10.