It is x + 3 = 0.
You can have infinitely many lines through one specific point, each with a different equation. If you want to have a general equation for ANY line that goes through that point, use the point-slope equation for a line, and use a variable for the slope.
Because of undefined slope, because undefined slope does not have a slope it doesn't have anything to substitute for m in the point slope equation.
A vertical line HAS NO slope! The slope is undefined in this case.
Any vertical line has an undefined slope. The equation of the vertical line is x = a where the x-intercept is a.
you say undefined
You can have infinitely many lines through one specific point, each with a different equation. If you want to have a general equation for ANY line that goes through that point, use the point-slope equation for a line, and use a variable for the slope.
If the slope is undefined, it is a vertical line. Therefore the equation is x=2.
Because of undefined slope, because undefined slope does not have a slope it doesn't have anything to substitute for m in the point slope equation.
The equation of a line with an undefined slope is x = a.
An equation with an undefined slope is typically in the form x = a, where 'a' is a constant number. This indicates a vertical line on the coordinate plane, where every point on the line has the same x-coordinate and no defined slope because the line is perfectly vertical.
A vertical line HAS NO slope! The slope is undefined in this case.
Any vertical line has an undefined slope. The equation of the vertical line is x = a where the x-intercept is a.
you say undefined
Undefined slope is a vertical line along the horizontal point of origin., the slope would have a denominator of zero, which is undefined.
x = 1 (the line intersects the x-axis at 1, and is parallel to the y-axis)We cannot write the equation on the Slope-intercept form, since the slope of the line is undefined. 1 is the x-coordinate of any point on the given line.
9
Vertical lines always have an undefined slope. Slope for y = f(x) is given by :slope = dy/dxdx is zero at any point along a vertical line, making the slope undefined along a vertical line.