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Find an equation of a line that contains the points and . Write the equation in slope–intercept form.
Use the point and see that you get the same equation.
Find an equation of a line that contains the points and . Write the equation in slope–intercept form.
Since we have two points, we will find an equation of the line using the point–slope form. The first step will be to find the slope.
Find the slope of the line through (−3, −1) and (2, −2). | |
Choose either point. | |
Substitute the values into | |
Write in slope–intercept form. |
Find an equation of a line that contains the points and . Write the equation in slope–intercept form.
Again, the first step will be to find the slope.
This tells us it is a vertical line. Both of our points have an x -coordinate of . So our equation of the line is . Since there is no , we cannot write it in slope–intercept form.
You may want to sketch a graph using the two given points. Does the graph agree with our conclusion that this is a vertical line?
We have seen that we can use either the slope–intercept form or the point–slope form to find an equation of a line. Which form we use will depend on the information we are given. This is summarized in [link] .
To Write an Equation of a Line | ||
If given: | Use: | Form: |
Slope and y -intercept | slope–intercept | |
Slope and a point | point–slope | |
Two points | point–slope |
Suppose we need to find an equation of a line that passes through a specific point and is parallel to a given line. We can use the fact that parallel lines have the same slope. So we will have a point and the slope—just what we need to use the point–slope equation.
First let’s look at this graphically.
The graph shows the graph of . We want to graph a line parallel to this line and passing through the point .
We know that parallel lines have the same slope. So the second line will have the same slope as . That slope is . We’ll use the notation to represent the slope of a line parallel to a line with slope . (Notice that the subscript looks like two parallel lines.)
The second line will pass through and have . To graph the line, we start at and count out the rise and run. With (or ), we count out the rise 2 and the run 1. We draw the line.
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