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The standard form of the equation is 2x - y + 5 = 0
Standard. You need a linear equation in two variables for slope-intercept form.
If you mean a point of (0, 3) and a slope of 2 then the equation is y = 2x+3
5
When it is a line through the origin.
The standard form of the equation is 2x - y + 5 = 0
Solve the equation for ' y '.
Standard. You need a linear equation in two variables for slope-intercept form.
If you mean a point of (0, 3) and a slope of 2 then the equation is y = 2x+3
5
The standard form is: 5x - y + 4 = 0
When it is a line through the origin.
Y=2/3x - 7
The standard form equation of a line is y=mx+b. M represents the slope; slope is the change in x over the change in y. B represents the y-intercept.
The slope intercept form through 23 and 15 would be 5. This is considered as a math equation.
There is more than one "standard form". If the equation is not already solved for "y", solve it for "y". In that case, you'll get an equation of the following form (known as "slope-intercept form"): y = mx + b Where "m" is the slope of the line, and "b" is the y-intercept (the point where the line intercepts the y-axis).
You can write it either in standard form (ax + by = c) or in slope-intercept form (y = mx + b)