10
9
y = mx + b wher m = slope and b = y intercept
y = 6x-3
A straight line with slope m and intercept c has equation:
y = mx + c
For the line with slope m = 4 and intercept c = -6 this become:
y = 4x + -6
→ y = 4x - 6
So, the equation will be written in slope-intercept form, which is the easiest for me to write out. Here it is: y=-.6667x+2. The -.6 is repeating. "-.6667" is the slope, "x" a point on the line, and "2" the intercept. The formula for this kind of equation is "y=mx+b." I really hope this helps!
Slope = 1Y-intercept = 0Y = X
It is: y = x+3
-4
-5
If you mean: y = 2x-3 then the slope is 2 and the y intercept is -3
It is: y = x+3 whereas 1 is the slope and 3 is the y intercept
-4
slope intercept form is y=mx+b where m is the slope and b is the y intercept. y=9x+5 is the slope intercept form. In standard form Ax+Bx=c would be 9x-y=-5
1, it will have the same slope but the y intercept will be different.
If you mean y = 4x-1 then the slope is 4 and the y intercept is -1
ax + by = cThe graph if that equation is a straight line whose slope is (-a/b)and whose y-intercept is (c/b).