Well slope intercept form is y=mx+b and slope equation can be the same formula, except it might be interpreted in a different way. although, i may be wrong.
-9
No, they are not.
Move everything except the y to the same side as 12 to put the answer in slope-intercept form. -4y=-3x+12 y=3/4x -3
The slope is the the same, Yet The y-intercept is not the same
no it is different
Well slope intercept form is y=mx+b and slope equation can be the same formula, except it might be interpreted in a different way. although, i may be wrong.
-9
Here is how to solve it. First, find the slope of the given line. To do this, solve the equation for "y". That will convert the equation to the slope-intercept form. From there, you can immediately read off the slope. Since parallel lines have the same slope, the line you are looking for will have the same slope. Now you need to use the point-slope form of the equation, with the given point, and the slope you just calculated. Finally, solve this equation for "y" to bring it into the requested slope-intercept form.
No, they are not.
No.
x-3y=3 is the same as -3y=-x+3 and now divide by -3 and you have y=(1/3)x-1 which is the slope intercept form.
Move everything except the y to the same side as 12 to put the answer in slope-intercept form. -4y=-3x+12 y=3/4x -3
The slope is the the same, Yet The y-intercept is not the same
no the graph will be written in slope intercept form or y=mx+b
They have the same slope. If you write the lines in the slope-intercept form, you will get, for each line: y = ax + b where a is the slope, and b is the y-intercept (where the line crosses the y-axis). For two or more parallel lines, the coefficient "a" will be the same.
Parallel lines have the same slope, which makes them parallel. However, they cannot have the same y intercept, or else it would be the same line.