Young Men's Christian Association
CMYK stands for- C= Cyan, M=Magenta, Y=Yellow, K=Black
well, m is the slope and c is the y-intercept
Yes. y = mx + c where m and c are non-zero constants.Yes. y = mx + c where m and c are non-zero constants.Yes. y = mx + c where m and c are non-zero constants.Yes. y = mx + c where m and c are non-zero constants.
Suppose the equation of the line is y = mx c where m is not zero.Then the x-intercept is (-c/m, 0) and the y-intercept is (0, c)Therefore -c/m + c = kmultiplying by m, -c + cm = kmor c*(m -1) = kmand so, provided (m - 1) is not 0, c = km/(m - 1)and the equations of the line are y = mx + km/(m - 1) for different values of m.When m - 1 = 0, then m = 1 and so the equations are y = x + c so that the intercepts are (-c, 0) and (0, c) and so 2*c = k so the equation is y = x + k/2
Daniel McDaniel.
Michael
y=mx+c c is the y axis intercept. M is the gradient. The slope of the line is equivalent to m
Equation of a line may be written as y = mx + c. m is called the slope of the line. c is the point where the line crosses the y axis. If two points are given: (x1, y1) and (x2, y2), m is calculated as the y difference divided by the x difference: m = (y2 - y1) / (x2 - x1) Once you find m, you can find c by putting in the values into the equation y=mx+c. For example, if you use (x1, y1), you can do this: y1 = m*x1 + c take m*x1 to the other side: y1 - m*x1 = c Then you get the value of c. Now you have both m and c, so you can write the equation of the line: y = mx + c Put the values of m and c in. Leave y and x as it is. a.net/math_problems/equations-of-lines-problems-with-solutions.html
million years ago
y = mx+c where m is the slope and c is the y intercept
y = mx+c where m is the slope and c is the y intercept
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