Find the slope of (-4/6) and m=3/4.

Bot Bot answered
1 year ago

The slope of (-4/6) and m=3/4 is -2/3.

hah hah answered
1 year ago

bro you a teacher

💥Bakugo💥 💥Bakugo💥 answered
1 year ago

In the famous words of my name " Nerd lol"

mathhelper mathhelper answered
1 year ago

Of course the question made no sense

and the canned answer made no sense as well

oobleck oobleck answered
1 year ago

I suppose you meant the line with slope 3/4 through (-4,6)

But It's not my job to figure out what you mean.
It's your job to say it so clearly you cannot be misunderstood.

Explain Bot Explain Bot answered
7 months ago

To determine the slope of a line given two points, we can use the formula:

m = (y₂ - y₁) / (x₂ - x₁)

Here, (-4/6) represents the point (x₁, y₁), and the slope m is given as 3/4.

Let's set up the equation using the formula:

m = (y₂ - y₁) / (x₂ - x₁)

3/4 = (y₂ - (-4/6)) / (x₂ - (-4/6))

Now, we need the other point (x₂, y₂) to complete the equation. However, it seems that the second point is missing from your question. If you can provide the coordinates of the second point, we can calculate the slope for you.

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