Question 985204: How do you write an equation in standard form that goes through the point (-4,3)
and with a y-intercept of 0?
Answer by MathLover1(20850) (Show Source):
You can put this solution on YOUR website! given:
the line passes through the point ( , )
and with a y-intercept of ; means the line will pass through origin ( , )
so, firs we can find the equation of this line in slope-intercept form
Solved by pluggable solver: Find the equation of line going through points |
hahaWe are trying to find equation of form y=ax+b, where a is slope, and b is intercept, which passes through points (x1, y1) = (-4, 3) and (x2, y2) = (0, 0).
Slope a is .
Intercept is found from equation , or . From that,
intercept b is , or .
y=(-0.75)x + (0)
Your graph:

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so, the equation of this line in slope-intercept form is
the standard form for linear equations:
so, we have
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