How to Graph a Linear Equation
Pennpaper Team
A linear equation makes a straight line when graphed. Once you understand slope and intercepts, graphing lines becomes much easier.
Quick idea
To graph a line, you need enough information to plot two points or to start at the y-intercept and use the slope.
Steps
- Rewrite the equation in a form you understand.
- Find two points that satisfy the equation, or identify the slope and y-intercept.
- Plot the points on the coordinate plane.
- Draw a straight line through them.
Worked example
Graph y equals 2x plus 1.
Full solution
Step-by-step walkthrough
Step 1
The y-intercept is 1, so start at (0, 1).
Step 2
The slope is 2, which means rise 2 and run 1.
Step 3
Plot another point at (1, 3), then draw the line.
Common mistake
Do not treat the slope as a single point. Slope tells you how to move from one point to another.
Practice problems
- Graph y = x + 2.
- Graph y = -2x + 3.
- Graph y = 1/2 x - 1.
Answers
- Start at 2, slope 1.
- Start at 3, slope -2.
- Start at -1, slope 1/2.
Ask Pennpaper to explain it live
If the steps make sense but you still feel stuck, start a Pennpaper lesson and ask the tutor to draw the problem on the whiteboard. Seeing the symbols move step by step is often what makes the concept click.