How do you find the slope and intercept of 2x+3y=62x+3y=6?

2 Answers
Jul 19, 2018

Slope: -2/323
x-intercept: (3, 0)(3,0)
y-intercept: (0, 2)(0,2)

Explanation:

2x + 3y = 62x+3y=6

To find the slope, first make the equation into slope-intercept form:
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Subtract color(blue)(2x)2x from both sides of the equation:
2x + 3y quadcolor(blue)(-quad2x) = 6 quadcolor(blue)(-quad2x)

3y = 6 - 2x

Divide both sides by color(blue)3:
(3y)/color(blue)3 = (6-2x)/color(blue)3

y = 2 - 2/3x

We know that the slope is the value multiplied by x, meaning that the slope is -2/3.

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To find the x-intercept, plug in 0 for y and solve for x:
0 = 2 - 2/3x

Simplify:
-2 = -2/3x

3 = x

So the x-intercept is at (3, 0).

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To find the y-intercept, plug in 0 for x and solve for y:
y = 2 - 2/3(0)

y = 2 - 0

y = 2

So the y-intercept is at (0, 2).

Hope this helps!

Jul 19, 2018

See below:

Explanation:

We can find the x-intercept by setting y equal to zero. We get

2x=6=>x=3

This is our x-intercept.

Similarly, we can set x equal to zero to find the y-intercept. We get

3y=6=>y=2

This is our y-intercept.

Next, we can convert this equation into slope-intercept form

y=mx+b, with slope m

We can start by subtracting 2x from both sides to get

3y=-2x+6

Next, divide both sides by 3 to get

y=-2/3x+2

We see that our slope, the coefficient on x is -2/3.

Hope this helps!