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Find the equation of a line with a slope of 13/2
that passes through the point (−2, — 10).

User Mdickin
by
8.4k points

1 Answer

1 vote

Answer:
y=(13)/(2) x+3

Step-by-step explanation:

Remember the point-slope equation which is
y-y_(1) = m(x-x_(1) ) where
(x_(1) , y_(1) ) is your point and
m is your slope.

Given that we substitute what you have:


y-(-10) =(13)/(2) (x - (-2))

Minus and minus give us positive:


y+10 =(13)/(2) (x +2)

Multiply slope into the parenthesis:


y+10= (13)/(2)x + (13)/(2)*2\\

Calculate it:


y+10= (13)/(2)x +13

Isolate the
y by subtracting 10 from both sides:


y=(13)/(2) x + 13 -10

Your final equation is:


y=(13)/(2) x +3

Hope this makes sense!

And here's the graph to prove that the line actually goes through the point
(-2,-10):

Find the equation of a line with a slope of 13/2 that passes through the point (−2, — 10).-example-1
User Frglps
by
9.1k points

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