What is the equation of the line between (-17,14) and (19,6)?

1 Answer
Dec 4, 2015

y = -2/9x + 92/2

Explanation:

First, we find the slope m of the line.
The slope of the line is the change in y per unit of change in x. Equivalently, this means that a line with slope a/b will rise a units as x increases by b units. Then, we can find the slope from two points with the following formula:

m = ("change in "y)/("change in "x) = (y_2-y_1)/(x_2-x_1)

In this case, that gives us

m = (6-14)/(19 - (-17)) = -8/36 = -2/9

Now, we can write the equation using the point-slope form of a line.
y - y_1 = m(x - x_1)

Picking either of the points will work, so let's use (19, 6) (as an exercise, verify that this gives the same result if you use the other point). This gives us the equation

y - 6 = -2/9(x - 19)

If we wish to put that into the more common slope-intercept form, we can just multiply it out and solve for y.

y - 6 = -2/9x + 38/9

y = -2/9x + 92/2