How do you find the slope and intercept of xy=1?

3 Answers
Jul 28, 2018

See a solution process below.

Explanation:

This equation is in Standard Linear form. The standard form of a linear equation is: Ax+By=C

Where, if at all possible, A, B, and Care integers, and A is non-negative, and, A, B, and C have no common factors other than 1

The slope of an equation in standard form is: m=AB

The y-intercept of an equation in standard form is: CB

1x+1y=1

Therefore:

  • The slope is: m=11=1

  • The y-intercept is: 11=1 or (0,1)

1, & x-intercept is 1 & y-intercept is 1

Explanation:

Given equation of straight line is

xy=1

x1+y1=1

The above equation is in standard intercept form of line: xa+yb=1 which has

x-intercept: a=1

y-intercept: b=1

The given equation of line:

xy=1

y=x1

The above equation is in standard slope-intercept form: y=mx+c with slope

m=1

Slope: m=1

Jul 30, 2018

Slope: 1, y-intercept 1

Explanation:

Recall slope-intercept form

y=mx+b, with slope m and a y-intercept of b.

We essentially just want a y on the left side. Let's subtract x from both sides to get

y=x+1

Next, divide both sides by 1 to get

y=x1

Now, our equation is in slope-intercept form, with a slope of 1, and a y-intercept of 1.

Hope this helps!