Yes - provided you allow both x and y intercepts.
No, linear equations don't have x2. Equation with x and y are usually linear equations. Equations with either x2 or y2 (but never both) are usually quadratic equations.
A linear equation is y = mx + c where m is the gradient and c is the y-intercept. Linear equations are always graphically shown as a straight line, regardless of the gradient or the y-intercept.
A linear equation is an equation that in math. It is a line. Liner equations have no X2. An example of a linear equation is x-2 A linear equation also equals y=mx+b. It has a slope and a y-intercept. A non-linear equation is also an equation in math. It can have and x2 and it is not a line. An example is y=x2+3x+4 Non linear equations can be quadratics, absolute value or expodentail equations.
YES, all linear equations have x-intercepts. because of the x, y has to be there 2!
Yes - provided you allow both x and y intercepts.
No, linear equations don't have x2. Equation with x and y are usually linear equations. Equations with either x2 or y2 (but never both) are usually quadratic equations.
A linear equation is y = mx + c where m is the gradient and c is the y-intercept. Linear equations are always graphically shown as a straight line, regardless of the gradient or the y-intercept.
A single point, at which the lines intercept.
makes it very easy to graph linear equations
A linear equation is an equation that in math. It is a line. Liner equations have no X2. An example of a linear equation is x-2 A linear equation also equals y=mx+b. It has a slope and a y-intercept. A non-linear equation is also an equation in math. It can have and x2 and it is not a line. An example is y=x2+3x+4 Non linear equations can be quadratics, absolute value or expodentail equations.
I think they will intercept
YES, all linear equations have x-intercepts. because of the x, y has to be there 2!
It is x-3.
Two linear equations (or lines) with the same y-intercept and different slopes are intersecting lines. They intersect at the y-intercept. If the slopes are negative reciprocals (ex: one slope is 3 and one slope it -1/3) then they are perpendicular lines.
The x-intercept is where the line intersects with, or crosses, the x axis. To find it, take the equation, put in 0 for y, and solve for x. The intercept will be (#,0).
No; if the slope is zero and it is above or below y=0 it will not have an x intercept.