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Question
when we describe a line, the first thing we notice is its steepness. mathematically we measure steepness with slope. slope is a type of rate of change. it compares how much the line moves up or down (the
ise\) with how much it moves left or right (the
un\). a line that goes upward as you move to the right has a positive slope. a line that goes downward as you move to the right has a negative slope. a line that is flat has a slope of zero, and a vertical lines slope is undefined.
there are different ways to write the equation of a line, and each form is useful in a different situation. in slope - intercept form, y = mx + b, the slope is visible as m, and the number b shows where the line crosses the y - axis. in point - slope form, y - y1 = m(x - x1), the slope and a single known point are used to describe the line. in standard form, ax + by = c, both intercepts can be found easily, and fractions are often avoided.
even though they look different, slope - intercept, point - slope, and standard form all describe the same line. they are just different ways of organizing the same information. lines can also be compared to each other: parallel lines never meet because they have the same slope, while perpendicular lines meet at a right angle because their slopes are negative reciprocals.
questions
- what does slope compare when describing a line?
- how can we tell from a graph whether the slope is positive, negative, zero, or undefined?
- in slope - intercept form, what does the number b represent?
- when is point - slope form most useful?
- why might someone prefer standard form instead of slope - intercept form?
- how can three different forms of an equation still describe the same line?
- what must be true about the slopes of parallel and perpendicular lines?
- Compares vertical change to horizontal change.
- Positive: rises right; negative: falls right; zero: flat; undefined: vertical.
- y - intercept.
- When a point and slope are known.
- Useful for some algebraic operations.
- They represent same linear relationship.
- Parallel: equal slopes; perpendicular: negative - reciprocals.
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- Vertical change to horizontal change.
- Positive if rises to the right, negative if falls to the right, zero if flat, undefined if vertical.
- y - intercept.
- When a point on the line and its slope are known.
- For algebraic manipulations and finding intercepts easily.
- They are different ways to represent the same linear relationship.
- Parallel lines have equal slopes, perpendicular lines have negative - reciprocal slopes.