Asked by Keanna
How do you write slope and y
Intercept as an ordered pair
Intercept as an ordered pair
Answers
Answered by
Anonymous
the y-intercept is the point at which the graph of the line crosses the y-axis. The x-coordinate at this point is zero. Though we have not plotted this point on the graph of the line, you can see that it does exist at the point where the line crosses the y-axis.
slope(y=mx+b) - The first is m, the coefficient of x. That value has special meaning for the graph of the line. It is the slope of the line, or how steep
or inclined the line is. The value b in the slope-intercept form indicates the second piece of information, the y-intercept, which is the point (0, b).
slope(y=mx+b) - The first is m, the coefficient of x. That value has special meaning for the graph of the line. It is the slope of the line, or how steep
or inclined the line is. The value b in the slope-intercept form indicates the second piece of information, the y-intercept, which is the point (0, b).
Answered by
rob
hey Anonymous, stop plagiarizing stuff!!! you copied it from this website: www.pcrest3.com/fopasl/52.pdf
Answered by
Writeacher
Hey, "rob"!! Stop posting answers to yourself. That's just silly and a waste of time.
Answered by
connor
facs
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