I have been informed that on March 7th from 6:00am to 6:00pm Central Time Lamar University will be doing some maintenance to replace a faulty UPS component and to do this they will be completely powering down their data center.
Unfortunately, this means that the site will be down during this time. I apologize for any inconvenience this might cause.
Paul
February 18, 2026
Section 3.2 : Lines
10. Find the equation of the line through \(\left( { - 7,2} \right)\) and is parallel to the line \(3x - 14y = 4\).
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Start SolutionFirst, we need to get the slope of our new line, i.e. the line through the point \(\left( { - 7,2} \right)\). We know this line is parallel to the line \(3x - 14y = 4\) and so must have the same slope as the second line.
Therefore, all we need to do is put the equation of the second line into slope-intercept form and get its slope.
\[\begin{align*}3x - 14y & = 4\\ 14y & = 3x - 4\\ y & = \frac{3}{{14}}x - \frac{2}{7}\hspace{0.25in}:\hspace{0.25in}{m_2} = \frac{3}{{14}}\end{align*}\]So, the new line must have slope of \({m_1} = {m_2} = \frac{3}{{14}}\) .
Show Step 2Now, we have both the slope of the new line as well as a point through the new line so we can use the point-slope form of the line to write down the equation of the new line.
\[y = 2 + \frac{3}{{14}}\left( {x - \left( { - 7} \right)} \right) = 2 + \frac{3}{{14}}\left( {x + 7} \right) = \frac{3}{{14}}x + \frac{7}{2}\]