y = (c - Ax) / (B)
The answer depends on what form the equation is in and what form you want it in. The standard form is ax + by +c = 0 where x and y are variables and a, b and c are constants. There are also the 1-d equivalent: ax + b = 0 and 3-d equivalent: ax + by + cz + d = 0 and, equivalent equations in spaces with higher dimensions.
x = (c - b)/a in a deliberately complicated form!
The origin and infinitely many other points of the form (x, ax) where x is any real number.
If y = ax and a = 0, then y=0. No matter what x is, y is still 0. Therefore any graph of y=ax (where a=0) will simply be a line at y=0, which is the x-axis.
y = (c - Ax) / (B)
The answer depends on what form the equation is in and what form you want it in. The standard form is ax + by +c = 0 where x and y are variables and a, b and c are constants. There are also the 1-d equivalent: ax + b = 0 and 3-d equivalent: ax + by + cz + d = 0 and, equivalent equations in spaces with higher dimensions.
x = (c - b)/a in a deliberately complicated form!
if your town level is high enough then you should have an ax. just use the ax to chop the log in half
The origin and infinitely many other points of the form (x, ax) where x is any real number.
Before this question can be answered, you'll need to rewrite the equation in a legible manner. Do you mean: ax + by = czd? ax - by + cz = d? ax + by + czd? (not even an equation) Please use spoken words to express your question when the form won't accept symbols. For example, the first of those equations could be expressed as "a times x plus b times y equals c times z to the power of d".
If y = ax and a = 0, then y=0. No matter what x is, y is still 0. Therefore any graph of y=ax (where a=0) will simply be a line at y=0, which is the x-axis.
1
y=ax y'=ln(a)*ax
ax + b = 15 or ax + b = -15
False.
ax - b = c ax = b + c x = (b + c)/a