You can follow the following steps.
* First, you determine the slope between the two points. Just calculate delta-y / delta-x (that is, difference in y-coordinates, divided by the difference in x-coordinates, between the two points).
* Next, you use the point-slope formula, to get an equation for the line. You can use any of the two points for this; each of the points will give you an equation that looks different, but the two equations are equivalent, if you do everything correctly.
* Finally, solve the resulting equation for "y"; that will give you the equation in slope-intercept form.
-1
(4,2), (2,1),(-2,-1)
You haven't given points, you've just given single values. for there to be a point in a plane, you need 2 coordinates, both x and y
The answer is linear extrapolation.
Y Equals X PointsAll points that has the same y coordinates as x coordinates are on the y=x line.
5
But it's not an equation because there is no equal sign and no points are given.
The solution set for a given equation is the set of all points such that their coordinates satisfy the equation.
The equation for the given points is y = x+4 in slope intercept form
There are infinitely many points on the line defined by the given equation.
There are infinitely many points on any line and it is impossible to list them. The points are those whose x and y coordinates satisfy the given equation.
Use the equation; y=mx+b where m is the slope Use your 2 points as y and b (intercept)
-1
Class point
Points: (1, 5) and (2, 7) Slope: 2 Equation: y = 2x+3
All points whose y-coordinate is twice its x-coordinate.
(1,2) (0,5) (-1,8) (2,-1) (-2,11) All of these are solutions to the given equation.