No, it is horizontal.
That would be because all the graphed values of x are 4. So you can plug anything in for Y and it will still be on that vertical line.
The line x = -4 is vertical, so a line that is perpendicular to it is horizontal, so its slope is 0.
a vertical line at x=3
That's a vertical line; the slope is not defined.
No, it is horizontal.
That would be because all the graphed values of x are 4. So you can plug anything in for Y and it will still be on that vertical line.
x = 4 is a straight line that is vertical when plotted on the xy graph, where y is the vertical axis and x is the horizontal axis. A vertical line has an infinite slope; the slope is infinity
The line x = -4 is vertical, so a line that is perpendicular to it is horizontal, so its slope is 0.
A line with the equation:x = a constant valueis a vertical line. Examples of such a line are x = 3, x = 5, x = 10, x = -4.The slope of a vertical line is infinite.
a vertical line at x=3
That's a vertical line; the slope is not defined.
X = 4 is a vertical line, 4 units to the right of the y-axis.
No, in the Cartesian coordinate system it would show a vertical line whose intersection of the x-axis is 4.
WHY THE LINE X=4 IS A VERTICAL LINE.
The equation of the line x = 4 has no term for y in the equation. Therefore any value of y can be used and the x coordinate is still equal 4. So a straight vertical line, crossing the x axis at (4,0) is the only line which satisfies these conditions. You can plot some points: (4,0); (4,100); (4,-5265), etc. and then connect the dots to see that it is a straight vertical line.
the slope is infinite because you have a vertical line. To find a parallel line, the formula would be "x= any number" because that would also give you a vertical line.