How do you find the slope of a line #2x + 4y = -2#?

1 Answer
Jan 30, 2018

See a solution process below:

Explanation:

This equation is in Standard Linear Form. The standard form of a linear equation is: #color(red)(A)x + color(blue)(B)y = color(green)(C)#

Where, if at all possible, #color(red)(A)#, #color(blue)(B)#, and #color(green)(C)#are integers, and A is non-negative, and, A, B, and C have no common factors other than 1

#color(red)(2)x + color(blue)(4)y = color(green)(-2)#

The slope of an equation in standard form is: #m = -color(red)(A)/color(blue)(B)#

Substituting gives:

#m = -color(red)(2)/color(blue)(4) = -1/2#