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Give the slope of the line which is parallel to y=−3x+7 (can you give me the equation?)

User Pmarflee
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2 Answers

4 votes

Answer:

Explanation:

Usually in a problem of this sort you must supply one point through which the new line passes; here you have not yet done that.

Let's suppose that the new line, which is parallel to y=−3x+7, passes through the point (0, 2). Remembering that parallel lines have the same slope, we

write the new line as y = mx + b and replace m with -3; we also replace x with 0 and y with 2:

2 = -3(0) + b. Solving for b, we get b = 2. Thus, the desired equation of the line parallel to y=−3x+7 and passing through (0, 2) is

y = -3x + 2

User Aayush Sharma
by
4.6k points
2 votes

Answer:

Slope is -3, equation is y=-3x+b, where b can be any number but not 7.

Explanation:

Parallel lines have the same slope, so the slope of a line parallel to this is also -3.

An example of a parallel line to this is y=-3x+2, or y=-3x-4.

User Sifu
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4.7k points