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Question: How do you find the x and y intercepts for the given function \(2x-3y=6\) and then plot the graph....

How do you find the x and y intercepts for the given function 2x3y=62x-3y=6 and then plot the graph.

Explanation

Solution

Change of form of the given equation will give the x-intercept and y-intercept of the line 2x3y=62x-3y=6. We change it to 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 pp and qq respectively. then we place the points on the axes and from there we draw the line on the graph.

Complete step-by-step solution:
We are taking the general equation of line to understand the slope and the intercept form of the line 2x3y=62x-3y=6. It’s in the form of ax+by=cax+by=c. We convert it to y=23x2y=\dfrac{2}{3}x-2. The equation is in the form of y=mx+ky=mx+k. m is the slope of the line. The slope of the line is 23\dfrac{2}{3}.
We have to find the x-intercept, and y-intercept of the line 2x3y=62x-3y=6.
For this 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 bepp and qq respectively. The points will be (p,0),(0,q)\left( p,0 \right),\left( 0,q \right).
The given equation is 2x3y=62x-3y=6. Converting into the form of xp+yq=1\dfrac{x}{p}+\dfrac{y}{q}=1, we get

& 2x-3y=6 \\\ & \Rightarrow \dfrac{2x}{6}+\dfrac{-3y}{6}=1 \\\ & \Rightarrow \dfrac{x}{3}+\dfrac{y}{-2}=1 \\\ \end{aligned}$$ **Therefore, the x intercept, and y intercept of the line $2x-y=6$ is 3 and 2 respectively. The axes intersecting points are $\left( 3,0 \right),\left( 0,-2 \right)$.** ![](https://www.vedantu.com/question-sets/a31d9b60-9d70-4f96-8460-5d66d8bb491d429312123998435588.png) **Note:** A line parallel to the X-axis does not intersect the X-axis at any finite distance. 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 $.