How do you graph the line y=-x+2y=x+2?

1 Answer
Mar 7, 2016

I decided that the best way to do this is by using pictures with a bit of explanation

Explanation:

The equation y=xy=x is saying: whatever value you decide to give to xx will also end up being the same value for yy

Notice that the graph goes upwards as you move from left to right
This is called a positive slope (gradient)
If it had been y=-xy=x then the slope would go down as you move from left to right.

Tony B

'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
This is what happens when the xx in the equation is written as -xx

Negative values of xx are made positive: Example y=(-1)xx(-2)=+2y=(1)×(2)=+2

Positive values of xx are made negative: Example y=(-1)xx(2)=-2y=(1)×(2)=2

Tony B

Tony B

'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The equation y=-x+2y=x+2 is virtually the same as y=-x y=x but the whole thing is lifted up 2

Tony B

Tony B