Asked by Marie
line parellel 4x=3y-13. got an ans of 13/4 but not sure if it's correct.
Answers
Answered by
MathMate
You have an existing line of:
4x=3y-13
which when expressed in the usual slope-intercept form is:
y = (4/3)x + 13/3
where (4/3) is the slope, and 13/3 is the intercept.
Any other line parallel to this one would have the same slope (4/3) and an intercept depending on another condition that is not given.
Thus any line with a slope of (4/3) would be parallel to the given line.
4x=3y-13
which when expressed in the usual slope-intercept form is:
y = (4/3)x + 13/3
where (4/3) is the slope, and 13/3 is the intercept.
Any other line parallel to this one would have the same slope (4/3) and an intercept depending on another condition that is not given.
Thus any line with a slope of (4/3) would be parallel to the given line.
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