How do you find the slope and intercept to graph 2x+y=7?

1 Answer
Nov 6, 2015

Manipulate the equation into the slope-intercept form y = mx + b to find the slope m =-2 and y-intercept b=7

Explanation:

The simplest method of finding the slope and y-intercept of a linear equation is to put it into the slope-intercept form of y=mx+b where m is the slope and b is the y-intercept.

Starting from 2x + y = 7, all we need to do is subtract 2x from each side of the equation to obtain y = -2x + 7

The equation is then in slope-intercept form, where m = -2 and b = 7


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Let's take a look at why the y-intercept and slope are represented by b and m.

First, note that the y-intercept is the point on the graph where x=0
So, setting x=0 in the equation y=mx+b gives y=b, showing that the graph intersects the y-axis at (0, b).

Next, note that as b remains constant, if you increase the value of x by 1 from any initial value, the value of y increases by m. So, by the "slope"="rise"/"run" formula, we have a rise of m for a run of 1, meaning the slope of the graph is m/1 = m.