av David Kedrowski 14 år siden
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Vertical lines have the form x = a.
Horizontal lines have the form y = b.
The equation Ax + By + C = 0 where A, B, and C are constants and A and B are not both zero, is called the general form of a linear equation in the variables x and y.
The equation Ax + By = C where A, B, and C are constants and A and B are not both zero, is called the standard form of a linear equation in the variables x and y.
The equation of the line that has slope m and intersects the y-axis at the point (0,b) is given by
y = mx + b
This is also the function form of linear equations
Points on a graph of the form (0,b) where a graph crosses the y-axis.
Points on a graph of the form (a,0) where a graph crosses the x-axis.
An equation of the line that has slope m and passes through the point (x1,y1) is given by
y - y1 = m(x - x1)
This can be derived from the formula for slope.
If L1 and L2 are distinct nonvertical lines that have slopes m1 and m2 respectively, then L1 is perpendicular to L2 if and only if
m1 = -1 / m2
or alternately
m1 * m2 = -1
'
Lines with slope m=0 are perpendicular to lines with undefined slopes; that is, horizontal lines and vertical lines are perpendicular to each other.
Two distinct lines are parallel if and only if their slopes are equal or their slopes are undefined.
m1=m2
The slope, m, of a line containing the distinct points (x1,y1) and (x2,y2) is given by
vertical change
slope = m = --------------------
horizontal change
y2-y1
= ------
x2-x1
rise
= ----
run
change in y
= -------------
change in x
m>0 implies the line increases from left to right
m<0 implies the line decreases from left to right
m=0 implies a horizontal line
m undefined imples a vertical line
Cartesian coordinate system
coordinate plane
xy-plane
Axes
x-axis
y-axis
Origin
Ordered pair
coordinates
(x, y)
(distance from vertical axis, distance from horizontal axis)
Quadrants
I (+,+)
II (-,+)
III (-,-)
IV (+,-)