Topic 9 Linear Equation and Function
Topic 9 Linear Equation and Function
• Slope m = y2 - y1 = y1 - y 2
x2 - x 1 x1 - x 2
Interpretation of Slope
• The slope of a line can be interpreted as the
change in the vertical (in y) for one unit change
in the horizontal(in x).
• For a positive slope, if x increases (decreases) by
one unit then y increases (decreases) by the value
of the slope.
• For a negative slope, if x increases (decreases) by
one unit then y decreases (increases) by the value
of the slope.
EXAMPLE:
Compute the slope of the line segment
connecting the points (4, 9) and (7, 18).
Interpret the slope.
Solution:
Using the slope formula,
m = 18 - 9 = 3.
7 -4
If x increases by one unit, then y increases by 3
units. Or, if x decreases by one unit, then y
decreases by 3 units.
EXAMPLE:
• Find the slope of the line that passes
through the points (-10, 16) and (-14,26).
Interpret the slope.
• Solution: Using the slope formula,
• slope m = 26 - 16 = - 2.5.
• -14 - (-10)
• If x increases by one unit, then y decreases
by 2.5 units. Or, if x decreases by one unit,
then y increases by 2.5 units.
Equation of Straight Lines
• Point-Slope Form
• Slope-Intercept Form
• General Form
Point-Slope Form
An equation of a line that passes through
the point x1 , y1 with slope m is given
by:
y y1 m x x1
Ex. Find an equation of the line that passes through (3,1)
and has slope m = 4
y y1 m x x1
y 1 4 x 3
y 1 4 x 12
4 x y 11 0
Slope-Intercept Form
An equation of a line with slope m and
y-intercept 0,b is given by:
y mx b
Since two points are given, compute the slope. Use one of
the point, lets say (2,3) and the slope m=-1/3 to get the
point-slope form of the equation of the line.
demand
curve
x units
Equilibrium Point
EXAMPLE
Demand & Supply
The supply and demand for flour have been estimated as being given
by the equations
S=0.8p+0.5 D=-0.4p+1.5
Where, p= dollar S & D=pound units of flour
Find the market price and graph the supply and demand equations.
Solution:
The market price p is the solution of the equation
S=D
0.8p+0.5 = -0.4p+1.5
1.2p = 1
p = 0.8333
At price of $0.83 per pound, supply and demand for flour are equal.
• Fixed cost is the sum of all costs that are
independent of the level of production.
• Variable cost is the sum of all costs that are
dependent on the level of output.
• Total cost = fixed cost + variable cost
• Total revenue = (price per unit) x
(number of units sold)
• Profit = total revenue − total cost
The Cost Function
C(x)=Fixed cost (FC)+Variable cost (VC) = F + cx
Where
x – number of units of the commodity produced or sold.
s – selling prices
c – production cost / unit.
EXAMPLE
Cost
A firm has fixed production costs of RM10 and variable production
costs of RM2 per unit produced.
i) Write down the equation of total cost function
ii) Graph the total cost function
Solution:
FC=RM10 VC=RM2x
Since TC=FC + VC, the total cost in producing x units;
C
TC = 10 + 2x
x
EXAMPLE
Revenue
Suppose each cone ice is sold for RM2.50 irrespective of the
number of units sold.
i) Write down the equation of total revenue function
ii) Graph the total revenue function
Solution:
i) Total revenue is price multiplied by the number of units sold,
that is
TR = 2.5x
ii) Note that price is constant at RM2.50 irrespective of value of x
EXAMPLE
Cost, Revenue & Profit
A manufacturer has a monthly fixed cost RM100 000 and a
production cost of RM14 for each unit produced. The product
sells for RM20 per unit.
i) What is cost function
ii) What is the revenue function
iii) What is profit function
Solution:
i) C(x) = 14x + 100 000
ii) R(x) = 20x
iii) P(x) = R(x) – C(x) = 20x – (14x + 100 000) = 6x – 100 000
Break-Even Analysis
Point/position where a business does not make any profit
or loss, or in other words;
The break-even level of operation is the level of
production that results in no profit and no loss.
Total Revenue = Total Cost
Profit = Total Cost – Total Revenue = 0
profit
loss
Cost
Units
EXAMPLE
Break Even Points
Mammoth candies private limited has daily fixed costs from
salaries and building operations of RM300. Each pound of
candy produced RM1 and is sold RM2.
i) Find the TC of production for Q pounds of candy
ii) Find the TR from selling Q pounds of candy
iii) What is the break-even points?
Solution:
i) TC = RM1Q + RM300
ii) TR = RM2Q
iii) Break-even point is the point where TR = TC,
2Q = RM1Q + 300
Q = 300
EXAMPLE
Break Even Points
A manufacturer of video-game cartridges sells each cartridge
for RM19.95. The manufacturing costs of each cartridge is
RM14.95. Monthly fixed costs are RM8000. During the first
month of sales of a new game, how many cartridges must be
sold in order for the manufacturer to break-even?
Solution:
TC = RM14.95Q + 8000 TR = RM19.95Q
Break-even point is the point where TR = TC,
19.95Q = RM14.95Q + 8000
5Q = 8000
Q = 1600
Applications of Equations
Example - Mixture
2n 3n 350
5n 350
350
n 70
5
Each part has 70 ml.
Amount of alcohol = 2n = 2(70) = 140 ml
Amount of acid = 3n = 3(70) = 210 ml
Example – Profit