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MAKING AN ARGUMENT Your friend claims that given f(0) and any other value of a linear function f, you can write an

equation in slope-intercept form that represents the function. Your cousin disagrees, claiming that the two points could lie on a
vertical line. Who is correct? Explain.
O Your friend. You can write an equation in slope-intercept form even if the two points are on a vertical line.
O Your cousin. You may need more than two points to write an equation in slope-intercept form.
O Your friend. If f is a function, then the line is not vertical.
O Your cousin. If the line is vertical, it will not have a slope.

MAKING AN ARGUMENT Your friend claims that given f(0) and any other value of a linear-example-1
User Katze
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3.2k points

2 Answers

3 votes

Answer:

Your friend. If ƒ is a function, then the line is not vertical.

Explanation:

I just had this question, and I solved it and got it right, see the picture

MAKING AN ARGUMENT Your friend claims that given f(0) and any other value of a linear-example-1
User Alvincrespo
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3.7k points
6 votes

Answer:

O Your friend. If f is a function, then the line is not vertical.

Explanation:

If you are given that the equation is a linear function, it can't have any undefined values.

User Dimitry K
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3.4k points