What is the equation of the line passing through (1,-4) and (4,-1)?

1 Answer
Nov 12, 2015

y=x-5

Explanation:

If you know that a line passes through two points, then that line is unique. If the points are (x_1,y_1) and (x_2,y_2), then the equation for the line is

\frac{x-x_2}{x_1-x_2} = \frac{y-y_2}{y_1-y_2}

In your case, we have (x_1,y_1)=(1,-4) and (x_2,y_2)=(4,-1)

Plugging these values into the formula gives

\frac{x-4}{1-4} = \frac{y-(-1)}{-4-(-1)}

which becomes

\frac{x-4}{cancel(-3)} = \frac{y+1}{cancel(-3)}

Isolating the y term, we arrive at the form y=x-5

Let's verify:
our two points satisfy this equation, because the y coordinate is smaller than the x coordinate by 5 units:

y_1=-4 = x_1-5=1-5, and

y_2 = -1 = x_2-5 = 4-5