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| Question 107395:  Can someone help me with this problem? I think I am missing a step somewhere and I cannot figure out where.
 Find the slope and y-intercept by writing the equation in slope intercept form and graph.
 3x+y=-2
 Would you consider the y a 1?
 Thanks
 Found 2 solutions by  brandombe, bucky:
 Answer by brandombe(4)
      (Show Source): 
You can put this solution on YOUR website! Yes you are correct to solver for x and y just think of the problem like this 3x+1y=-2
 you divide -2by 3 and x will - -2/3
 and then divide -2/1 and y =-2
 I hope this helps
Answer by bucky(2189)
      (Show Source): 
You can put this solution on YOUR website! The method to use in solving this problem is to rearrange the given equation into the point-slope form. The point-slope form of a linear equation is:
 .
 y = mx + b
 .
 m, the multiplier of x, is the slope of the graph, and b, the constant is the value on
 the y-axis where the graph crosses the y-axis.
 .
 You were given the equation:
 .
 3x + y = -2
 .
 You want to get y by itself on the left side of the equation. You can do that by getting rid
 of the 3x on the left side. You can do that by subtracting 3x from both sides of the equation.
 .
 When you subtract 3x from the left side, it combines with the 3x that was given, and the
 two cancel out. Therefore, the 3x disappears from the left side. And when you subtract 3x
 from the right side, -3x appears on the right side.  So by subtracting 3x from both sides
 the equation becomes:
 .
 y = -3x -2
 .
 Compare this equation to the point-slope form of y = mx + b. When you do, you see that
 the left side is y. And on the right side, m (the multiplier of x) compares to -3 in your
 problem. Since m is the slope of the equation in point-slope form, then you can immediately
 say that the slope in your problem is -3. Notice also that b (the constant) compares to
 -2 in your problem. And since b is the intercept on the y-axis, you can say that in your
 problem the y-intercept (that is, the value on the y-axis where the graph crosses the
 y-axis) is - 2.
 .
 In summary, the graph of the given equation is a straight line. It intercepts the y-axis
 at y = -2 and it has a slope of -3 ... meaning that for every 1 unit you move horizontally
 from a point on the graph, the graph then goes down 3 units. [The down direction is because
 of the minus sign on -3.]
 .
 The graph of y = -3x - 2 looks like this:
 .
 
  .
 Hope this helps you to understand this problem and helps you to find where you went astray.
 .
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