137k views
2 votes
What is the slope of the line given by the following equation?  13x + 4y = 52

User CindyH
by
7.8k points

1 Answer

7 votes

Given the linear equation;


13x+4y=52-----1

We can find the slope by comparing the above equation with the general equation of a line. This can be seen below.


y=mx+c------2

Where m is the slope of the equation

We then make y the subject of the formula in equation one


\begin{gathered} 13x+4y=52 \\ \text{subtract 13x from both sides} \\ 13x-13x+4y=52-13x \\ 4y=52-13x \\ \text{Divide both sides by 4} \\ (4y)/(4)=(52)/(4)-(13x)/(4) \\ y=13-(13x)/(4) \end{gathered}

By comparison,


m=-(13)/(4)

Answer: The slope of the equation is


\text{slope}=-(13)/(4)

User Zepee
by
8.2k points

No related questions found

Welcome to QAmmunity.org, where you can ask questions and receive answers from other members of our community.

9.4m questions

12.2m answers

Categories