An x-intercept is any point on a graph where a line touches the x-axis.
X axis is across and Y axis is down
yx-3 is not an equation, and it has no graph.
The point where a graph intercepts the x axis may have several names. It could be called an x-intercept, a root, or a solution.It is at: (x, 0).
The y-intercept on the graph shows where the graph crosses the y-axis. The value is always the value of y at that point, because x is always equal to zero.
if you are looking at a graph the y intercept is when the graph crosses the y axis and the x intercept is when the graph crosses the x axis. if you have a formula... plug zero in for x to find the y intercept, and plug zero in for y to find the x intercept
The x-intercept is the point where the graph touches the x-axis.
The graph doesn't intersect either axis.
Where a line crosses the y an x axis on a graph.
An x-intercept is any point on a graph where a line touches the x-axis.
The x-intercept is the point at which a graph or function intersects the x-axis. It is the value of x when y is equal to zero on the graph.
X axis is across and Y axis is down
you put zero in for x and then the answer you get would be the y and then the x,y would be your intercept
You can either measure or estimate the coordinates visually from the graph, or solve the equation underlying the graph.
The x intercept is the point where the graph intersects the x axis. The young coordinate of this point is zero.
yx-3 is not an equation, and it has no graph.
That's not an equation. It doesn't have a graph or an intercept.