How do you find an equation of the tangent line to the graph of #f(x) = 1/(x-1)# at the point (2,1)? Calculus Derivatives Tangent Line to a Curve 1 Answer Bill K. Jun 2, 2015 Since #f(x)=(x-1)^{-1}#, #f'(x)=-(x-1)^{-2}=-1/((x-1)^2)# so that #f'(2)=-1#. Since #f(2)=1#, the equation of the tangent line is #y=f'(2)(x-2)+f(2)=-(x-2)+1=-x+3# Answer link Related questions How do you find the equation of a tangent line to a curve? How do you find the slope of the tangent line to a curve at a point? How do you find the tangent line to the curve #y=x^3-9x# at the point where #x=1#? How do you know if a line is tangent to a curve? How do you show a line is a tangent to a curve? How do you find the Tangent line to a curve by implicit differentiation? What is the slope of a line tangent to the curve #3y^2-2x^2=1#? How does tangent slope relate to the slope of a line? What is the slope of a horizontal tangent line? How do you find the slope of a tangent line using secant lines? See all questions in Tangent Line to a Curve Impact of this question 3639 views around the world You can reuse this answer Creative Commons License