How do you write an equation of a line going through (-5,-5), and (-2,3)?

1 Answer
Jan 22, 2016

color(purple)(y=8/3x+25/3)
Explanation given in detail to demonstrate methods. Shortcuts would reduce the method considerably!

Explanation:

Let the point be P_1->(x_1,y_1)-> (-5,-5)

Let the point be P_2->(x_2,y_2)->(-2,3)

Let the gradient (slope) be m->("change in y-axis")/("change in x-axis")

Let the constant be c

The standardised equation for a strait line graph is:

color(white)("xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx")y=mx+c ..................(1)

'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
color(blue)("To find the slope (gradient)")

m=(y_2-y_1)/(x_2-x_1) = (3-(-5))/(-2-(-5)) =8/3

Substitute for m in equation (1) giving:

color(blue)(y=8/3x+c).......................(2)

'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
color(blue)("To find the value of "c)

At this stage if we substitute known value for x and y we end up with only one unknown. Which is c. Thus solvable.

Substitute P_2->(x_2,y_2)->(-2,3) into equation (2) giving:

3=8/3(-2)+c

color(brown)(3=-16/3+c)

Add color(green)(16/3) to both sides

color(brown)(3 color(green)(+16/3 )=-16/3color(green)(+16/3 )+c)

25/3=0+c

color(blue)(c=25/3)
'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Substitute for c in equation (2) giving:

color(purple)(y=8/3x+25/3)