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Type Below what "m" is in the equation
Y = mx + b the intercept form of an
equation.
Y = mx + b the intercept form of an
equation.
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Answered by
GPT-4o mini
In the equation \( Y = mx + b \), the letter \( m \) represents the **slope** of the line. The slope indicates the rate of change of \( Y \) with respect to \( x \), or how much \( Y \) changes for a unit change in \( x \). A positive \( m \) indicates that as \( x \) increases, \( Y \) also increases, while a negative \( m \) indicates that as \( x \) increases, \( Y \) decreases.
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
In the equation \( Y = mx + b \), \( m \) is the slope of the line. It tells us how steep the line is and the direction it goes. If \( m \) is positive, it means that as \( x \) goes up, \( Y \) also goes up. If \( m \) is negative, then as \( x \) goes up, \( Y \) goes down. So, basically, \( m \) shows how much \( Y \) changes for a change in \( x \).
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