Find the slope m, and y-intercept b of the given equation 1. y=5

think about it.

y=mx+b
For the slope (mx), is there a number/coefficient before a x?
From there, I think you can figure out what is what.

but theres no slope so its just x?

the slope is the coefficient, not the x. What number would you put in front of x to eliminate x?

that will be 1 right

no, (1)(x)=???

i hope your not getting mad. im sorry. math is not my subject i hope u can help me tho that will mean alot 2 me. well hold on ill get this

uhmmm 0

yes!

so slope is 0

and
the y-intercept is 5?
how do i graph that?

To find the slope and y-intercept of the given equation y = 5, we can rewrite it in the form of y = mx + b, where m represents the slope and b represents the y-intercept.

The given equation, y = 5, is already in the desired form. Here, we can see that the slope (m) is 0 because there is no x-term. The y-intercept (b) is 5 because it is the constant term in the equation.

Therefore, the slope (m) is 0 and the y-intercept (b) is 5.