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The equation y - 2 = 3(x + 1) is in point-slope

form. Which is the slope-intercept form?
y = 3x + 1
y = 3x - 3
y = 3x + 5

2 Answers

2 votes

Final answer:

To convert the equation y - 2 = 3(x + 1) to slope-intercept form, distribute the slope and isolate y to get y = 3x + 5, which is the correct slope-intercept form.

Step-by-step explanation:

The equation provided, y - 2 = 3(x + 1), is initially in point-slope form. To convert it to slope-intercept form, we need to solve for y. Here's how it's done step-by-step:

  1. Distribute the slope (which is 3) across the (x + 1) on the right side of the equation, so it becomes 3x + 3.
  2. Add 2 to both sides of the equation to isolate y, resulting in y = 3x + 3 + 2.
  3. Combine like terms, which gives us y = 3x + 5, which is the slope-intercept form of the equation.

The term m represents the slope, and b represents the y-intercept in the slope-intercept form of a line (y = mx + b). In our example, the slope (m) is 3, and the y-intercept (b) is 5.

User Gavin Sutherland
by
8.3k points
1 vote
Y-2=3x+3
Then add two
So y=3x+5
Hope this helps sorry if wrong
User GregPK
by
8.2k points

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