(0, -14) and (14, 0) are both points on the line of y = -14 + x. Any point where the first number (also known as the x-coordinate) is 14 more than the second number (the y-coordinate) is on that line.
It's the equation of a straight-line graph. Every point on the line is a solution of the equation. There are an infinite number of them.
-2x plus 3y equals 1
Same way you graph y = -4x - 0.5
The starting point on the y-axis changes from -2 to 6.
That is the standard equation to graph a line.
(a) y = -3x + 1
It's the equation of a straight-line graph. Every point on the line is a solution of the equation. There are an infinite number of them.
-2x plus 3y equals 1
y = -0.5x plus or minus any number
A linear equation ?
Same way you graph y = -4x - 0.5
That's not an equation, so there's nothing to graph. Simple way to tell: There's no "equals" sign in it.
Since no points were given, for any point (x,y), plug the x and y values of the point into the equation. If you get a contradiction, ie 5=3 or something similar, then the point does not lie on the graph.
The starting point on the y-axis changes from -2 to 6.
answer is 1
That is the standard equation to graph a line.
y=6