80 likes | 381 Views
November 19, 2012 Graphing Linear Equations using a table and x- and y-intercepts. Warm-up: For #1-3, use the relation, {(3, 2), (-2, 4), (4, 1), (-1, 2), (0, 5) Identify the domain and range. Is the relation a function? Explain. What is the inverse of the relation?
E N D
November 19, 2012Graphing Linear Equations using a table and x- and y-intercepts Warm-up: For #1-3, use the relation, {(3, 2), (-2, 4), (4, 1), (-1, 2), (0, 5) Identify the domain and range. Is the relation a function? Explain. What is the inverse of the relation? If f(x) = 3x – 5, find f(-2) HW 4.5: Pg. 221 #16-24even, graph 27-33 odd using a table, 35 and 37 using x- and y-intercepts
y y y y y y 5 5 5 5 5 5 p(x) = 3x2 – 4 5x + y = 1 x x x x x x -5 -5 -5 -5 -5 -5 5 5 5 5 5 5 -5 -5 -5 -5 -5 -5 Lesson 5.4 Linear Equations- Look only at the equations: How do you know when it is linear and when it is not?- Come up with some general rules for determining linear function equations.
Identifying Linear Functions What makes something linear? • X with nothing extra - no exponents, no square roots, not in a denominator • The graph is a line! • Examples: Are these linear functions?
Graphing an Equation using a table. Any equation can be graphed using a table! Graph y = 4 – 3x x y = 4 – 3x y (x,y) What is the Domain and Range?
Let’s Graph! If you continued to find more points, you would notice that it starts to form a line on the graph that goes forever! Therefore, y = 4 – 3x , is called a LinearEquation
Standard Form • Ax + By = C • A, B, and C are integers • A is positive • A and B are not both zero • Identify A, B, and C: 3x – 5y = 12 Example 1: Rewrite the linear equation in Standard Form: 2y – 4x + 10 = 11
Using the x- and y-intercepts when a linear equation is in Standard Form What are x and y intercepts? Where are they on a graph? x-intercept– where the graph crosses the x-axis y-intercept– where the graph crosses the y-axis
Finding the x- and y-intercepts and graph 3x – 2y = 15 X - intercept: (x, 0) y = 0, so plug in 0 for y and solve for x. • Y - intercept: (0, y) • x = 0, so plug in 0 for x and solve for y.