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In Mathematics / High School | 2014-05-04

What is the slope-intercept form of [tex]6x - 2y - 4 = 0[/tex]?

Please explain with some details.

Asked by Brande496

Answer (3)

6 x − 2 y − 4 = 0 t h e s l o p e in t erce pt f or m i s : y = m x + b 6 x − 2 y − 4 = 0 − 2 y = − 6 x + 4 / : ( − 2 ) y = − 2 − 6 ​ x + ( − 2 ) 4 ​ y = 3 x − 2 t h e s l o p e ( t h e m u lt i pl i er o f x re p rese n t e d b y m ) i s \3 an d t h e y − in t erce pt ( t h eco n s t an t re p rese n t e d b y b ) i s − 2

Answered by Lilith | 2024-06-10

the slope intercept form is y=mx+b -2y=-6x+4 divide both sides by -2 y=3x-2

Answered by HunterX | 2024-06-10

The slope-intercept form of the equation 6 x − 2 y − 4 = 0 is y = 3 x − 2 . In this form, the slope is 3 and the y-intercept is -2. This means the line crosses the y-axis at (0, -2) and rises 3 units for every 1 unit it runs to the right.
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Answered by Lilith | 2024-09-26