When the line is horizontal, does the slope equal 0, or is it undefined?

1 Answer
Jun 12, 2015

The slope of a horizontal line is #0#.

Explanation:

On a horizontal line, all points have the same #y#-value, so the change in y over the change in x (the rise over the run) is always #0# over that change in #x#.

If we pick two different points on the line, they must have different #x# -values so we get #0# over a non-#0# number, which is #0#.

Example:

Line #y=3#,

points: #(1,3)#, #(5,3)# , then #m = (3-3)/(5-1) = 0/4 =0#

points: #(7,3)#, #(2,3)# , then #m = (3-3)/(2-7) = 0/(-5) =0#

points: #(a,3)#, #(b,3)# with #a != b#, then #m = (3-3)/(b-a) = 0/"non-0"=0#