How do you find the x and y intercepts for -4x-7y+7=0?

2 Answers
Mar 2, 2018

I tried this:

Explanation:

You need to set x=0 and y=0 in your expression.

Let us find the x intercept; we need to, basically, stay on the x axis so that y has to be zero (otherwise we are not on the x axis).
So, we get:

y=0
into your expression:
-4x-7*color(red)(0)+7=0
-4x=-7
x=7/4
So the x-axis intercept will be:
(7/4,0)

Now for the y intercept we need x to be zero and we get:
x=0
into your expression:
-4*color(red)(0)-7y+7=0
-7y=-7
y=7/7=1
So the y-axis intercept will be:
(0,1)

Let us check and "see" our intercepts graphically:
graph{-(4/7)x+1 [-10, 10, -5, 5]}

Mar 2, 2018

"x-intercept "=7/4," y-intercept "=1

Explanation:

"to find the intercepts that is where the graph crosses"
"the x an d y axes"

• " let x = 0, in the equation for y-intercept"

• " let y = 0, in the equation for x-intercept"

-4x-7y+7=0

rArr-4x-7y=-7

x=0rArr0-7y=-7rArry=1larrcolor(red)"y-intercept"

y=0rArr-4x+0=-7rArrx=7/4larrcolor(red)"x-intercept"
graph{(y+4/7x-1)((x-7/4)^2+(y-0)^2-0.04)((x-0)^2+(y-1)^2-0.04)=0 [-10, 10, -5, 5]}