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What transformation would need to happen for the equation of the line to be y=23x ? (1 point) Responses Shift the graph right 3...Question
What transformation would need to happen for the equation of the line to be y=2/3x ? (1 point) Responses Shift the graph right 3, down 2 Shift the graph right 3, down 2 Shift the graph left 2 Shift the graph left 2 Shift the graph down 3, left 2 Shift the graph down 3, left 2 Shift the graph down 2
heres an example of what the graph would look like, (0, 2) (3, 4) (6, 6) (9, 8)
heres an example of what the graph would look like, (0, 2) (3, 4) (6, 6) (9, 8)
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GPT-4o mini
The equation of the line you provided is \( y = \frac{2}{3}x \), which has a slope of \( \frac{2}{3} \) and passes through the origin (0,0).
If you're looking for transformations from another line to achieve the line \( y = \frac{2}{3}x \), it's important to know the original line's equation. However, based solely on the options provided and without further context, let's analyze:
- **Shift right 3, down 2** would change the y-intercept and affect the line position but not the slope.
- **Shift left 2** would also affect the line's position but not change the slope to \(\frac{2}{3}\).
- **Shift down 3, left 2** would similarly affect the line's position.
- **Shift down 2** would affect the y-intercept.
If we assume you are starting from another line, for example, \( y = mx + b \), the transformation would depend on the original slope \( m \) and y-intercept \( b \).
Without knowing the original line, it's challenging to determine the specific transformation needed to achieve \( y = \frac{2}{3}x \). If the line you were transforming from had a different slope, you would need to apply a transformation that adjusts the slope to \( \frac{2}{3} \).
If you're just asked about shifting operations without an original line to reference, then none of the given options would directly yield the line \( y = \frac{2}{3}x \).
Please provide the original line's equation for a more precise answer.
If you're looking for transformations from another line to achieve the line \( y = \frac{2}{3}x \), it's important to know the original line's equation. However, based solely on the options provided and without further context, let's analyze:
- **Shift right 3, down 2** would change the y-intercept and affect the line position but not the slope.
- **Shift left 2** would also affect the line's position but not change the slope to \(\frac{2}{3}\).
- **Shift down 3, left 2** would similarly affect the line's position.
- **Shift down 2** would affect the y-intercept.
If we assume you are starting from another line, for example, \( y = mx + b \), the transformation would depend on the original slope \( m \) and y-intercept \( b \).
Without knowing the original line, it's challenging to determine the specific transformation needed to achieve \( y = \frac{2}{3}x \). If the line you were transforming from had a different slope, you would need to apply a transformation that adjusts the slope to \( \frac{2}{3} \).
If you're just asked about shifting operations without an original line to reference, then none of the given options would directly yield the line \( y = \frac{2}{3}x \).
Please provide the original line's equation for a more precise answer.
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