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32 Linear Equations

A linear equation is an equation that graphs as a straight line. It relates two variables and can take several forms, including slope-intercept form (y=mx+b), point-slope form (y-y1=m(x-x1)), and general form (Ax+By+C=0). The graph of a linear equation will be a straight line, unlike equations with exponents or roots which produce non-linear graphs. Common linear equations include y=2x+1, y-3=1/4(x-2), and 3x+2y-4=0.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
139 views5 pages

32 Linear Equations

A linear equation is an equation that graphs as a straight line. It relates two variables and can take several forms, including slope-intercept form (y=mx+b), point-slope form (y-y1=m(x-x1)), and general form (Ax+By+C=0). The graph of a linear equation will be a straight line, unlike equations with exponents or roots which produce non-linear graphs. Common linear equations include y=2x+1, y-3=1/4(x-2), and 3x+2y-4=0.

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Linear Equations

A linear equation is an equation for a straight line

These are all linear equations:

y = 2x+1 5x = 6+3y y/2 = 3 - x

Let us look more closely at one example:

Example: y = 2x+1 is a linear equation:

The graph of y = 2x+1 is a straight line

 When x increases, y increases twice as fast, hence 2x


 When x is 0, y is already 1. Hence +1 is also needed
 So: y = 2x + 1

Here are some example values:

X y = 2x + 1
-1 y = 2 × (-1) + 1 = -1
0 y=2×0+1=1
1 y=2×1+1=3
2 y=2×2+1=5
Different Forms
There are many ways of writing linear equations, but they usually have constants (like "2"
or "c") and must have simple variables (like "x" or "y").

Examples: These are linear equations:

y = 3x - 6
y - 2 = 3(x + 1)
y + 2x - 2 = 0
5x = 6
y/2 = 3

But the variables (like "x" or "y") in Linear Equations do NOT have:

 Exponents (like the 2 in x2)


 Square roots, cube roots, etc

Examples: These are NOT linear equations:

y2 - 2 = 0
3√x - y = 6
x3/2 = 16

Slope-Intercept Form

The most common form is the slope-intercept equation of a straight line:


Slope (or Gradient) Y Intercept

Example: y = 2x + 1

(Our example from the top, which is in Slope-Intercept form)

 Slope: m = 2
 Intercept: b = 1

Point-Slope Form

Another common one is the Point-Slope Form of the equation of a straight line:

y - y1 = m(x - x1)

Example: y - 3 = ¼(x - 2)

 x1 = 2
 y1 = 3
 m=¼
General Form

And there is also the General Form of the equation of a straight line:

Ax + By + C = 0

(A and B cannot both be 0)


Example: 3x + 2y - 4 = 0

 A=3
 B=2
 C = -4

As a Function

Sometimes a linear equation is written as a function, with f(x) instead of y:

y = 2x - 3 f(x) = 2x - 3
These are the same!

And functions are not always written using f(x):

y = 2x - 3 w(u) = 2u - 3 h(z) = 2z - 3
These are also the same!

The Identity Function

There is a special linear function called the "Identity Function":

f(x) = x

And here is its graph:


It makes a 45° (its slope is 1)

It is called "Identity" because what comes out is identical to what goes in:

In Out
0 0
5 5
-2 -2
...etc ...etc

Constant Functions

Another special type of linear function is the Constant Function ... it is a horizontal line:

f(x) = C

No matter what value of "x", f(x) is always equal to some constant value.

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