How do you find the slope and intercept of y = -5x + 2?

2 Answers
Aug 2, 2018

Slope: -5

x-intercept: (2/5, 0)

y-intercept: (0, 2)

Explanation:

y = -5x + 2

This equation is in slope-intercept form:

www.katesmathlessons.com

Based on the image, we know that the slope is the value multiplied by x, so the slope is -5.

To find the x-intercept, plug in 0 for y and solve for x:
0 = -5x + 2

Subtract color(blue)2 from both sides:
0 quadcolor(blue)(-quad2) = -5x + 2 quadcolor(blue)(-quad2)

-2 = -5x

Divide both sides by color(blue)(-5):
(-2)/color(blue)(-5) = (-5x)/color(blue)(-5)

2/5 = x

x = 2/5

The x-intercept is at (2/5, 0).

To find the y-intercept, plug in 0 for x and solve for y:
y = -5(0) + 2

y = 0 + 2

y = 2

The y-intercept is at (0, 2).

Hope this helps!

Aug 2, 2018

Slope -5, x-int 2/5, y-int 2

Explanation:

The good thing is that this equation is in slope-intercept form

y=mx+b, with slope m and a y-intercept of b. With this in mind, we see that our slope is -5 and our y-intercept is 2.

What about the x-intercept?

The x-intercept is the value when y=0. We can plug this into our equation to get

0=-5x+2

-5x=-2=>x=2/5

Therefore, our slope is -5, our x-intercept is 2/5 and our y-intercept is 2.

Hope this helps!