Without an equality sign and not knowing the plus or minus values of the given terms it can't be considered to be a straight line equation. In general for two lines to be parallel they will have the same slope but different y intercepts.
When a straight line equation is parallel to another equation the slope remains the same but the y intercept changes
1, it will have the same slope but the y intercept will be different.
2. Parallel lines have the same slope.
1) Solve the given equation for "y". The resulting equation will be in slope-intercept form, so you can immediately read off its slope. 2) Any line parallel to that line will have the same slope.
It is also zero as parallel lines have the same slope
The slope is 5. Parallel lines always have the same slope.
When a straight line equation is parallel to another equation the slope remains the same but the y intercept changes
1, it will have the same slope but the y intercept will be different.
2. Parallel lines have the same slope.
1) Solve the given equation for "y". The resulting equation will be in slope-intercept form, so you can immediately read off its slope. 2) Any line parallel to that line will have the same slope.
It is also zero as parallel lines have the same slope
You are missing a - or + sign. The answer is 5/2 though. :)
6-1=5 100-95=5
7/9
To find the slope of a line that is parallel to the line given by the equation ( y = 3x + 5 ), we first identify the slope of the original line. The equation is in slope-intercept form ( y = mx + b ), where ( m ) represents the slope. In this case, the slope ( m ) is 3. Lines that are parallel have the same slope, so the slope of a line parallel to this one is also 3.
Without an equality sign it is not an equation but when a straight line equation is parallel to another straight line the slope remains the same but the y intercept is different
To write an equation of parallel lines in slope-intercept form (y = mx + b), first identify the slope (m) of the line you want to be parallel to, as parallel lines have the same slope. Then, choose a y-intercept (b) for the new line—this can be any value. Substitute the slope and the chosen y-intercept into the slope-intercept form to get the equation of the parallel line. For example, if the original line is y = 2x + 3, a parallel line could be y = 2x + 1.