How do you graph the equation -4x+2y=8?

1 Answer

See below:

Explanation:

There are many ways to go about it. I'm going to show how to do it by transforming the equation into a slope-intercept form.

First, we need to solve for y:

-4x+2y=8

2y=4x+8

y=2x+4

This equation is now in slope-intercept form, which has the general form of:

y=mx+b, where m is the slope and b is the y intercept.

We can first find the first point, the y-intercept, as (0,4) - that is, when x=0, y=4.

Next to do is work with the slope. In this case, m=2. Slope can be written as "rise"/"run" - and so a slope of 2 means the next point to find will be up 2 and to the right 1 of our y-intercept. This puts it at (1,6). Connect those two points with a straightedge. It should look like this:

graph{2x+4 [-10, 10, -7, 7]}