How do you graph y = (-2/3)x + 4?

1 Answer
Apr 14, 2018

graph{(-2/3x)+4 [-10, 10, -5, 5]}

Explanation:

The equation is in the form

y=mx+b

so it's a linear equation, which creates a straight line on a graph.

The m value is the slope and the b value is the y-intercept.

The slope is -2/3 because it goes down by 2/3 on the y-axis for every increment of 1 in the x-axis.

The y-intercept is (0,5) because that's the point where the line touches the y-axis.