How do you find the x and y intercepts for 4x - y = 10?

1 Answer
Jan 30, 2016

The x-intercept is the point where the y-value is zero, and vice versa. Substituting 0 in for x and y in turn and solving gives x-"intercept"=(10/4,0), y-"intercept" = (0,-10).

Explanation:

The x-intercept for a function is the point where it crosses the x-axis, and that is the horizontal line 'y=0'. Substitute in y=0 in the original equation to find the x-intercept:

4x-0=10
4x=10
x=10/4 (or 2.5)

The x-intercept, therefore, is the point (10/4,0).

Similarly, the y-intercept is the point where the function crosses the y-axis, the line x=0, so substitute in x=0:

0-y=10
y=-10

So the y-intercept is the point (0,-10).