A direct variation equation is one that requires y varies directly as x and looks like this in equation form:

where k is the constant of variation. If we solve this for y, we have y = kx, which happens to be a linear function... a line. k here, then, serves as the slope. So what we are given as points on a direct variation function are actually points on a line. The equation for this requires that we find the slope and then rewrite the formula accordingly. First the slope:

Now we need to write the equation by using one of the points' coordinates. I picked the first point that has an x coordinate of -9 and a y coordinate of -3. Fitting those into the slope-intercept form of a line,

which simplifies to
-3 = -3 + b and b = 0. That means that the equation of direct variation is
or just
