How do you find the tangent line of a point on a line?

1 Answer
May 8, 2016

Because of the way tangent line to a curve is defined, the tangent line to a straight line at any (every) point on the line is the straight line.

Explanation:

The line tangent to the graph of #y=f(x)# at the point #(a,f(a))# is

the line containing #(a,f(a))# with slope #f'(a) = lim_(xrarra)(f(x)-f(a))/(x-a)# if the limit exists.

For a straight line, we have #f(x) = mx+b#
#(a,f(a)) = (a, ma+b)#
and the limit used above turns out to be #m#.

The line through #(a, ma+b)# with slope #m# is #y=mx+b#.

Alternatively

Some presentations use the definition of the slope of the tangent line at the point where #x = a# in the form:

#lim_(hrarr0)(f(a+h)-f(a))/h#.

This form gives the same answer as the one used above.