y = ax + b
Solve the line equation for "y", to get it in slope-intercept form. You can immediately read the slope from this equation.Divide -1 by (slope of this first line) to get the slope of the second line - the one perpendicular to the given line. Write an equation for any line with this slope.
When the equation of a line is parallel to another line the slope remains the same but the y intercept changes
A line graph needs an equation. x-2 and x3 are expressions: neither is an equation.
That would be a linear equation.
It is a straight line.
Because if you ever want to graph that equation you need the actual equation itself to help you graph it.
To determine the equation of the line in a graph, you need two key pieces of information: the slope (m) and the y-intercept (b). The general form of a linear equation is ( y = mx + b ). If you can identify these values from the graph, you can then write the specific equation for the line. Without the graph, I can't provide the exact equation.
Yes
It depends on the graph. There may or may not be an equation.
The graph will be a line.
When it is a linear equation.
Solve the line equation for "y", to get it in slope-intercept form. You can immediately read the slope from this equation.Divide -1 by (slope of this first line) to get the slope of the second line - the one perpendicular to the given line. Write an equation for any line with this slope.
the line
If it is a straight line, then the equation is linear.
This is a straight line graph with the equation, y = n where n is any positive or negative number.
When the equation of a line is parallel to another line the slope remains the same but the y intercept changes
Higuchi equation and a type of graph. There are many ways to write out this type of graph.