Slope = 0, intercept = 3
There is no y intercept, it is a straight verticle line a x = -6. And technically it has "infinite" slope (1/0), but it is more common to say "No slope".
y = 5x - 3
Yes, that is the slope intercept form of the equation for a straight line.
the slope is - 2 and the y intercept is 4
Slope = 0, intercept = 3
y = 5x - 3
Yes, that is the slope intercept form of the equation for a straight line.
the slope is - 2 and the y intercept is 4
Slope: -2 Intercept: 5
There is no y intercept, it is a straight verticle line a x = -6. And technically it has "infinite" slope (1/0), but it is more common to say "No slope".
Not quite. 'm' is the slope of the line. 'b' is the y-intercept The x-intercept is ( -b/m ).
A vertical line on a graph has infinite slope and no y-intercept. Its equation is [ x = a number ]. The number is the line's x-intercept.
The y intercept is 3, and since your slope is 0, you have a horizontal line.
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A line in slope-intercept form is: y = mx + b m is the slope of the line, and b is the y-intercept. To find the slope, find any two coordinates, and divide the difference in y-values by the difference in x-values; to find the y-intercept, find the value of y where x = 0.
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