Asked by Franshesca
                How do you graph y=x in a coordinate?
            
            
        Answers
                    Answered by
            Anonymous
            
    Slope intercept forum of an equation is 
y = mX + b
"m" is the slope and "b" gives the y-intercept if they exist.
y=x would be graphed with a slope of 1 and a y intercept of 0
y = 1 x X + 0
1 x X is just X, adding 0 to anything gives you the same number you started with.
A slope of 1 means you go up one point on the y axis for every 1 point on the x axis and mark a point. Continue the up one over to get two or more points and connect the dots.
Because this has a y intercept of z, its touches the y axix at 0.
Hopefully that was understandable.
    
y = mX + b
"m" is the slope and "b" gives the y-intercept if they exist.
y=x would be graphed with a slope of 1 and a y intercept of 0
y = 1 x X + 0
1 x X is just X, adding 0 to anything gives you the same number you started with.
A slope of 1 means you go up one point on the y axis for every 1 point on the x axis and mark a point. Continue the up one over to get two or more points and connect the dots.
Because this has a y intercept of z, its touches the y axix at 0.
Hopefully that was understandable.
                    Answered by
            Anonymous
            
    "Because this has a y intercept of z, its touches the y axix at 0. "
Should read
"Because this has a y intercept of 0, its touches the y axix at 0. "
    
Should read
"Because this has a y intercept of 0, its touches the y axix at 0. "
                                                    There are no AI answers yet. The ability to request AI answers is coming soon!
                                            
                Submit Your Answer
We prioritize human answers over AI answers.
If you are human, and you can answer this question, please submit your answer.