dy/dx = 5/4
Yes, the equation has a slope of 0.
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y = mx + b <-- (Slope Intercept equation) y = 4x - 1 <-- (Slope Intercept form)
The slope would be -2 (moving 2 units down and one across). When you have a linear equation, the slope is always the variable's coefficient.
That is called slope - intercept form
Yes, the equation has a slope of 0.
-1/2
35
y = mx + b <-- (Slope Intercept equation) y = 4x - 1 <-- (Slope Intercept form)
2y = 6x - 8y = 3x - 4========m(slope) = 3=========
The slope would be -2 (moving 2 units down and one across). When you have a linear equation, the slope is always the variable's coefficient.
To identify the slope in a linear equation, rearrange the equation into the form y = mx + b. The term m is the slope.
y = 4x-3 is already a linear equation. The slope is 4 and the y-intercept is -3
That is called slope - intercept form
You can graph a linear equation slope intercept by solving the equation and plugging in the numbers : y=mx+b
Standard. You need a linear equation in two variables for slope-intercept form.
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