If it is the equation for a line, then it can be rearranged into the format y = mx + b, where m is the slope of the line, and b is the point where the line intercepts the y-axis.
If it is not for a straight line, then the slope is changing with x, and the derivative of the function would find the slope at a particular x.
An equation of a line requires two parameters. The slope, by itself, is not enough.
the slope formula is y=mx+b slope-intercept form of an equation of a line. where m=slope and b=the y-intercept
the slope is 0
Slope or gradient = (y2-y1)/(x2-x1)
The slope is the gradient which is y2-y1/x2-x1 To find the y int you set the equation of the line equal to zero i think :/
You have to differentiate the equation. The dy/dx is the slope.
An equation of a line requires two parameters. The slope, by itself, is not enough.
the slope formula is y=mx+b slope-intercept form of an equation of a line. where m=slope and b=the y-intercept
Use point-slope formula
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the slope is 0
Slope or gradient = (y2-y1)/(x2-x1)
As for example in the straight line equation of y=3x+5 the slope is 3 and the y intercept is 5
The slope is the gradient which is y2-y1/x2-x1 To find the y int you set the equation of the line equal to zero i think :/
y=mx+b whatever multiplies x in this form is the slope
we have to change the given equation to y=mx+b.here m is the slope