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What happens to a line when the y-intercept is changed? Check all that apply.

A. As the y-intercept increases, the graph of the line shifts right.
B. As the y-intercept decreases, the graph of the line gets less steep.
C. As the y-intercept increases, the graph of the line shifts up.
D. As the yintercept decreases, the graph of the line shifts down.
E. As the y-intercept decreases, the graph of the line shifts left.​

User Tokland
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Answer:

As the y-intercept increases, the graph of the line shifts up;

As the y-intercept decreases, the graph of the line shifts down

Step-by-step explanation:

There are two ways to think about this problem. The first way would be the graphical approach:

  • if we only change the y-intercept, this means we keep the same slope;
  • y-axis is the vertical axis;
  • if we change the point at which the line crosses the y-axis, we either shift it upward for a higher y-intercept or downward for a lower y-intercept.

Now, thinking algebraically, a line has the following equation in a general form:


y = mx + b

The y-intercept is essentially obtained when x = 0, then:

y = b:

  • if we increase b value, the y value increases, so the graph shifts upward;
  • if we decrease b value, the y value decreases, so the graph shifts downward.
User Chakrit
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