Respuesta :
Knowing the slope and y-intercept of a line you can put its equation in slope-intercept form.
The slope-intercept form equation of a line is [tex]y=mx+b[/tex] where [tex]m[/tex] is the slope and [tex]b[/tex] is the y-intercept.
In this case, since the slope is 4 and the y-int. is -3, our equation must be
[tex]\boxed{y=4x-3}[/tex]
The slope-intercept form equation of a line is [tex]y=mx+b[/tex] where [tex]m[/tex] is the slope and [tex]b[/tex] is the y-intercept.
In this case, since the slope is 4 and the y-int. is -3, our equation must be
[tex]\boxed{y=4x-3}[/tex]
y=4x-3
4 is the slope and -3 is the y intercept
By plugging these values into the slope intercept form: y=mx+b I came up with the previous answer-y=4x-3
m= the slope, and b=the y intercept