How do you find the slope and intercept to graph #y=2x#?

2 Answers
Nov 1, 2015

See explanation

Explanation:

Standard for of equation is #y= mx+c#

where m is the gradient (slope) and c is the y-intercept. The gradient is the amount of up for the amount of along. So a gradient of say #2/3# would mean that for every 3 along the x-axis you would go up by 2 on the y-axis.

In your case the m is of value 2. This may be quite correctly written as #2/1#. So for every 1 along the x-axis you go 2 along the y-axis.

#color(green)("Your gradient is " 2)#

The line will cross the y-axis at #x=0#. So just substitute and solve.

so #y=2x "becomes " y=2 times 0#

and #2 times 0 = 0#

So your graph crosses the y-axis at #y=0#

Nov 1, 2015

The slope is #2# and the y-intercept is #0#.

Explanation:

#y=2x# is in the slope-intercept form of a linear equation, #y=mx+b#, where #m# is the slope and #b# is the y-intercept.

For the equation #y=2x#, the slope is #2# and the y-intercept is #0#.

graph{y=2x [-10, 10, -5, 5]}