I think it's easiest if you just find the x and y-intercepts. Then you have two points, hence a line.And as far as sketching goes, it's supposed to be easiest from slope-intercept form
I think it's easiest if you just find the x and y-intercepts. Then you have two points, hence a line.And as far as sketching goes, it's supposed to be easiest from slope-intercept form
Using y=mx+b, the x intercept would be -b/m and the y intercept would just be b, so there you go. Your two points are (-b/m,0) and (0,b).geek said:Which one do you use y=mx+b to graph? I think that one's easier.Zephyr said:I think it's easiest if you just find the x and y-intercepts. Then you have two points, hence a line.And as far as sketching goes, it's supposed to be easiest from slope-intercept form