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Question

Question: How do you find the slope for \(5x-4y=20\)?...

How do you find the slope for 5x4y=205x-4y=20?

Explanation

Solution

Change of form of the given equation will give the slope of the line 5x4y=205x-4y=20. We change it to the form of y=mx+ky=mx+k to find the slope m. At the end we get into the form of xp+yq=1\dfrac{x}{p}+\dfrac{y}{q}=1 to find the x intercept, and y intercept of the line as p and q respectively. Then we place the line on the graph based on that.

Complete step by step answer:
We are taking the general equation to understand the slope form of the line 5x4y=205x-4y=20.
The given equation 5x4y=205x-4y=20 is of the form ax+by=cax+by=c. Here a, b, c are the constants.
We convert the form to y=mx+ky=mx+k. m is the slope of the line.
So, converting the equation we get
5x4y=20 y=5x204=54x5 \begin{aligned} & 5x-4y=20 \\\ & \Rightarrow y=\dfrac{5x-20}{4}=\dfrac{5}{4}x-5 \\\ \end{aligned}
This gives the slope of the line 5x4y=205x-4y=20 as 54\dfrac{5}{4}.
We convert the given equation into the form of xp+yq=1\dfrac{x}{p}+\dfrac{y}{q}=1. From the form we get that the x intercept, and y intercept of the line will be p and q respectively.
The given equation is 5x4y=205x-4y=20. Converting into the form of xp+yq=1\dfrac{x}{p}+\dfrac{y}{q}=1, we get
5x4y=20 5x20+4y20=1 x4+y5=1 \begin{aligned} & 5x-4y=20 \\\ & \Rightarrow \dfrac{5x}{20}+\dfrac{-4y}{20}=1 \\\ & \Rightarrow \dfrac{x}{4}+\dfrac{y}{-5}=1 \\\ \end{aligned}
Therefore, the x intercept, and y intercept of the line 5x4y=205x-4y=20 is 4 and 5-5 respectively.
The intersecting points for the line 5x4y=205x-4y=20 with the axes will be (4,0)\left( 4,0 \right) and (0,5)\left( 0,-5 \right).

Note: A line parallel to the X-axis does not intersect the X-axis at any finite distance and hence we cannot get any finite x-intercept of such a line. Same goes for lines parallel to the Y-axis. In case of slope of a line the range of the slope is 0 to \infty .