Question 1097923
There are many ordered pairs for that equation (an infinite number, really).
An ordered pair for such an equation is written as two numbers separated by a comma, and the whole thing wrapped in brackets. The first number is a value for x; the second number is the corresponding value for y.
One ordered pair for that equation could be (1,11). Another pair could be (5,51).
That equation represents a relation between two quantities represented by x and y.
The variable x could be the number of weeks since you opened a checking account started with a $1 deposit, and y could the balance in that account.
We like to graph relations, and y = 10x + 1 would be graphed as the slanted line below.
{{{graph(300,300,-1,4,-5,45,10x+1)}}}
The location of each point in that graph is represented by an ordered pair pair (x,y).
To graph the relation, you make a table of values for x and y. You could chose values for one variable, then calculate the corresponding value for the other variable.
It could look like this:
{{{matrix(2,7,x,0,1,2,3,4,5,y,1,11,21,31,41,51)}}} .