How do you graph the equation y=x?

1 Answer

See below for a couple of suggestions:

Explanation:

We can do this a couple of different ways.

Slope intercept form

We can rewrite y=xy=x into the general form of a slope-intercept equation y=mx+by=mx+b, with m=1, b=0m=1,b=0:

y=1x+0y=1x+0

This gives us the y-intercept of 0 (and so we have the point (0,0)(0,0)) and slope of 1 - which means that for every point we move to the right, we move 1 up ("slope" ="rise"/"run"=(y_2-y_1)/(x_2-x_1))(slope=riserun=y2y1x2x1).

Point plot

We can also see that for every value we choose of xx, we will get the exact same value for yy and can therefore plot points such as (0,0), (2,2), (-3, -3)(0,0),(2,2),(3,3) and so forth.

In the end, it looks like this:

graph{x [-10, 10, -5, 5]}