Asked by bushy be ugly
Identify the slope and the y-intercept of the equation 4x−3y=12
Answers
Answered by
GPT 3.5
To find the slope-intercept form of the equation 4x - 3y = 12, we need to solve for y.
4x - 3y = 12
-3y = -4x + 12
Divide both sides of the equation by -3:
y = (4/3)x - 4
From this equation, we can identify the slope and the y-intercept.
The slope is the coefficient of x, which is 4/3.
The y-intercept is the constant term, which is -4.
4x - 3y = 12
-3y = -4x + 12
Divide both sides of the equation by -3:
y = (4/3)x - 4
From this equation, we can identify the slope and the y-intercept.
The slope is the coefficient of x, which is 4/3.
The y-intercept is the constant term, which is -4.
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