How do you find the intercepts for y=2x−13−x?
1 Answer
Aug 25, 2016
x-intercept=
y-intercept =
Explanation:
When the function crosses the y-axis (y-intercept) then the corresponding x-coordinate will be zero. Substituting x = 0 into the function will give the value of the y-intercept.
⇒y=0−13−0=−13 is the y-intercept Similarly, when the function crosses the x-axis (x-intercept) the corresponding y-coordinate will be zero. Substituting y = 0 into the function will give the value of the x-intercept.
⇒0=2x−13−x Now, the denominator of the function cannot be zero as this would make the function undefined. Hence the numerator must equal zero.
⇒2x−1=0⇒x=12 is the x-intercept
graph{(2x-1)/(3-x) [-10, 10, -5, 5]}