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Mathematics 15 Online
vanessad123:

What is the slope of this? m= y2-y1/x2-x1

vanessad123:

vanessad123:

HELP ME PLEASEE

Treeko:

i dunno

vanessad123:

bruh thx nev T-T

Treeko:

welcome, i gave u a medal, be happy lolllll

vanessad123:

-_-

Treeko:

im not goood at math T^T

vanessad123:

WELL SOMEONE ELSE PLEASE HELP MEE

Treeko:

@lui0210

Treeko:

@oliver69

Porque:

treeko aint helping

vanessad123:

@porque wrote:
treeko aint helping
fr

Porque:

choose two points and do m=y2-y1 over x2-x1 use th4e slope formula

Treeko:

@porque wrote:
treeko aint helping
be quite im tryna get ppl who know what there doing :>

Porque:

@treeko wrote:
@porque wrote:
treeko aint helping
be quite im tryna get ppl who know what there doing :>
u dont know dawg

Porque:

use the slope formula

Porque:

choow 2 points on the line

Porque:

choose*

Treeko:

@porque wrote:
@treeko wrote:
@porque wrote:
treeko aint helping
be quite im tryna get ppl who know what there doing :>
u dont know dawg
no... I'm in the same grade as her dur dur and I suck at math the only reason I'm here is bc I'm her bestie and I need help her

Porque:

@treeko wrote:
@porque wrote:
@treeko wrote:
@porque wrote:
treeko aint helping
be quite im tryna get ppl who know what there doing :>
u dont know dawg
no... I'm in the same grade as her dur dur and I suck at math the only reason I'm here is bc I'm her bestie and I need help her
bruh

umm:

Since it already shows \[ m = \frac{{y2 - y1}}{{x2 - x1}} \] Subtract the y-coordinate of the first point from the y coordinate of the second point. This gives you the vertical change (which is rise) between the two points. \(y2 - y1\) Subtract the x-coordinate of the first point from the x-coordinate of the second point. This gives you the horizontal change ( which is run) between the two points. \(x2 - x1\) Divide the vertical change (your rise) by the horizontal change (your run) to get the slope (m). So, the formula essentially measures how much the graph rises or falls vertically for each unit of horizontal movement.

Porque:

literally choose 2 points lable em then use slope formula

XxDevilxX:

Okay so you have a graph and you know that there is a point at (-2,0) and (0,-2) So you can either use the formula and input the numbers for each x and y value in the equation like this: (-2-0)/(0-(-2)) Or you could look at the graph and count how many times vertical it takes you to get to the next point and how many times horizontal it takes you, but a little note, since it looks like your scaling is going by 2's you would want to count by 2's.

vanessad123:

alr ty

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