Any equation with the form y=c is parallel to the y-axis, where c is a constant.
The equation is [ y = 3 ]. Its solution is y=3 . You get a straight line (parallel to the x-axis) that passes through only the y-axis, and it crosses the y-axis at (0,3). For all values of x, the value of y is 3
Y = 0
in the equation y=mx+b where y is the y-axis, x is the x-axis, m is the slope, and b is the y intercept. You can also write the equation in standard fore, or point-slope form.
Any line with the equation [ x = any number ] is parallel to the y-axis.
Any equation with the form y=c is parallel to the y-axis, where c is a constant.
y=-2.5 is parallel to the x axis. The equation of the x axis is y=0
The equation is [ y = 3 ]. Its solution is y=3 . You get a straight line (parallel to the x-axis) that passes through only the y-axis, and it crosses the y-axis at (0,3). For all values of x, the value of y is 3
Y = 0
Y = 0
The y-intercept of a linear equation is the point where the graph of the line represented by that equation crosses the y-axis.
Yes - It's the point on the y-axis that the equation passes through
in the equation y=mx+b where y is the y-axis, x is the x-axis, m is the slope, and b is the y intercept. You can also write the equation in standard fore, or point-slope form.
Any line with the equation [ x = any number ] is parallel to the y-axis.
The y-axis has the equation x=0, so every point on the y-axis has an x coordinate of zero.
The x-coordinate of any point on the y-axis is 0. The y-axis is a line perpendicular to the x-axis. Any point on a line perpendicular to the x-axis has the same x-coordinate. The y-axis is the line perpendicular to the x-axis through 0, and has the equation x = 0; similarly, the x-axis is the line perpendicular to the y-axis through 0 and has the equation y = 0.
x = 0.