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Summary. The slope-intercept form of a line is: y=mx+b where m is the slope and b is the y-intercept. The y-intercept is always where the line intersects the y-axis, and will always appear as (0,b) in coordinate form.
Definition 1. In the equation y = mx + b for a straight line, the number m is called the slope of the line. Definition 2. In the equation y = mx + b for a straight line, the. number b is called the y-intercept of the line.
To find the slope of a line given the equation of the line, first write it in slope-intercept form. Use inverse operations to solve for y so that it is written as y=mx+b. Then you can easily see the slope since it is the coefficient of the x variable, or the number in front of x.
The slope of a line characterizes the direction of a line. To find the slope, you divide the difference of the y-coordinates of 2 points on a line by the difference of the x-coordinates of those same 2 points.
To find the x-intercept of a given linear equation, plug in 0 for 'y' and solve for 'x'. To find the y-intercept, plug 0 in for 'x' and solve for 'y'. In this tutorial, you'll see how to find the x-intercept and the y-intercept for a given linear equation. Check it out!
There are three steps in calculating the slope of a straight line when you are not given its equation.
Steps
Using the slope-intercept form, the y-intercept is −3 .
In the equation of a straight line (when the equation is written as "y = mx + b"), the slope is the number "m" that is multiplied on the x, and "b" is the y-intercept (that is, the point where the line crosses the vertical y-axis). This useful form of the line equation is sensibly named the "slope-intercept form".
Using the slope-intercept form, the slope is 2 .
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