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The point-slope form of the equation of a line that passes through points (8, 4) and (0, 2) is y−4=1/4(x−8) . What is the slope-intercept form of the equation for this line?

1 Answer

4 votes

Answer:

y = 1/4x + 2

Explanation:

The general form of the point-slope form is


y-y_(1)=m(x-x_(1)), where (x1, y1) are any point on the line and m is the slope

We can convert the point-slope form of an equation into the slope-intercept form by isolating y on the left-hand side of the equation. To do this, we'll have to distribute to m to both x and -x1 and add y1 to both sides:


y-4=1/4(x-8)\\y-4=1/4x-2\\y=1/4x+2

Now, we can check the the slope-intercept form is correct by plugging in the (0, 2) for x and y and also (8, 4) for x and y. If the equation is true, then we've correctly converted the point-slope form to the slope-intercept form:

Plugging in (0, 2) for x and y in the slope-intercept form:


2=1/4(0)+2\\2=2

Plugging in (8, 4) for x and y in the slope-intercept form:


4=1/4(8)+2\\4=2+2\\4=4

answered
User Kulnor
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