Zero is when its a straight horizontal line
It its going neither up or down
Infinite is when its a straight vertical line
You could say its positive or negative and it will forever going up or down
You couldn't give it a slope number
The slope is zero. Slope is rise over run, the rise is zero, so zero divided by anything is zero.
Calculus is about applying the idea of limits to functions in various ways. For example, the limit of the slope of a curve as the length of the curve approaches zero, or the limit of the area of rectangle as its length goes to zero. Limits are also used in the study of infinite series as in the limit of a function of xas x approaches infinity.
y = (constant), like y=1 or y=2 you could write it as y = mx + b where the slope m is zero
VSWR on a line is infinite when the far end of the line is perfectly open or perfectly shorted,i.e. the line is terminated in an impedance of exactly zero or exactly infinite, AND the lineis perfectly lossless.Under those conditions, the reflection coefficient is 1.0 and the return loss is zero.
The set of non-negative integers includes zero: [0,1,2,3,4,...]. These are also called whole numbers. The set of positive integers does not include zero: [1,2,3,4...]. These are also called counting/natural numbers.
It is the difference in the abscissae of the points divided by the difference in their ordinates, provided the latter is not zero. Otherwise, the slope is infinite.
infinite
zero is horizontal, undefined is vertical
A line with slope of zero is horizontal. A line with no slope is vertical because slope is undefined on a vertical line.
No. Horizontal lines have zero slope. Vertical lines have infinite slope.
A line with an undefined slope is a vertical line. A line with a slope of zero is a horizontal line. If you use the formula for slope m = (y2-y1) divided by (x2-x1)... For an undefined slope you will get zero in the denominator, which you cannot have because you cannot divide by zero. For a slope equal to zero, you will get a zero in the numerator. Zero divided by any non-zero denominator, will give you a slope of zero.
The slope between any two points in a plane is the ratio of the difference in the vertical direction (the rise) and the difference in the horizontal direction (the run). Since it is a ratio, the difference in the horizontal direction may not be zero. However, the slope of a vertical line is considered to be "infinite". With that qualification, the slope between any two points on a plane can have any real value.The slope between any two distinct points on a graph is as defined above. The slope at a single point is defined only if the relevant function is differentiable at that point and it is the slope of the tangent to graph at that point.
Vertical. Te horizontal like has zero slope ( no slope) and the vertical line has infinite (very very high) slope
The slope is the value of m in which you "rise and run" point units The Y-intercept is the value in which X is zero
The slope (or gradient) if the line is parallel to the y-axis, is infinite. If it's parallel to the x-axis the slope is zero.
Undefined slope is when a line is exactly on the y-axis, for reasons unknown, the slope of a line on the y-axis cannot be determined, so therefore it it "undefined." A line with no slope is a line with a slope of zero. In order for a line to have a slope of zero, it must be directly on the x-axis, meaning it is horizontal. Horizontal lines are straight and have no slope
A line with zero slope is a straight horizontal line which neigher climbs nor descends along the X-Axis. A line with an undefined slope is a straight vertical line that does not move left or right along the Y- Axis.