Beginner

Straight-Line Graphs

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·Edexcel GCSE Mathematics·Pearson Edexcel 1MA1·6 min
A8·A9·A10

Coordinates in All Four Quadrants

A coordinate pair locates a point on a grid. The horizontal axis is the -axis; the vertical is the -axis. They intersect at the origin .

The axes divide the plane into four quadrants:

QuadrantExample
1st (top right)positivepositive
2nd (top left)negativepositive
3rd (bottom left)negativenegative
4th (bottom right)positivenegative

Reading coordinates: the -value (horizontal) is always stated first. A common error is reversing the pair.

To plot : move 3 left from the origin, then 4 up.

(Extra context — the midpoint formula belongs to G11 in the Edexcel 1MA1 spec, not A8. It appears here as a natural companion to coordinate reading and is assessed alongside straight-line graph work.)

Midpoint of two points and :

Worked example — midpoint of and :

Gradient of a Straight Line

The gradient measures the steepness of a line — rise over run.

  • Positive gradient: line slopes upward left to right.
  • Negative gradient: line slopes downward left to right.
  • Zero gradient: horizontal line.
  • Undefined gradient: vertical line.

Worked example — find the gradient of the line through and :

Worked example — find the gradient of the line through and :

The Equation y = mx + c

Every straight line (except vertical lines) can be written as , where:

  • = gradient (steepness and direction)
  • = -intercept (where the line crosses the -axis; the value of when )

Worked example — for the line :

  • Gradient: (goes up 3 for every 1 right)
  • -intercept: (crosses -axis at )

Reading the equation from a graph: identify where the line crosses the -axis (gives ) and pick two clear points to calculate the gradient (gives ).

Converting to :

Gradient ; -intercept . ✓

Finding the Equation of a Line

Given gradient and a point — use , then rearrange to .

Worked example — find the equation of the line with gradient 2 through :

Given two points — find the gradient first, then use .

Worked example — find the equation of the line through and :

Check: when :

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Parallel and Perpendicular Lines (Higher)

Parallel lines have the same gradient. If a line has gradient , any parallel line also has gradient .

Perpendicular lines cross at right angles. If a line has gradient , a perpendicular line has gradient (the negative reciprocal). Their gradients multiply to .

Worked example — find the equation of the line perpendicular to that passes through .

Gradient of :

Perpendicular gradient:

Check: at :

Interpreting Graphs in Context

Linear graphs in real contexts have practical meanings for gradient and intercept.

Distance-time graph: gradient = speed (distance ÷ time); a horizontal section means stationary; a steeper line means faster speed.

Conversion graphs (e.g. £ to y$-intercept is 0 if proportional.

Cost function — a plumber charges £50 call-out plus £30/hour. Cost :

  • Gradient (£30): additional cost per hour
  • -intercept (£50): fixed call-out charge, paid even if

Worked example — a straight-line graph passes through and .

Gradient: . Equation: .

In context (e.g. water draining): the initial volume is 80 litres; it decreases at 10 litres per minute.

Common Exam Mistakes

1. Reading — confusing gradient and intercept

In , the gradient is 2 and the -intercept is 5. In , the gradient is (negative) and the -intercept is 2.

2. Calculating gradient — not using full coordinate differences

Gradient requires . Reading off only a vertical distance without dividing by the horizontal distance gives the rise, not the gradient.

3. Perpendicular gradient — forgetting the negative

The perpendicular gradient is the negative reciprocal. The perpendicular to a line with gradient 4 has gradient , not .

4. Line through two points — not checking the answer

After finding the equation, substitute both original points to verify. If either fails to satisfy the equation, the gradient calculation was wrong.

MistakeCorrection
"Parallel to , so gradient = "Parallel lines share the same gradient: gradient = 3
"Gradient of line through and is " — this one is correct; a common version of the error would be using in the numerator
"Perpendicular to has gradient 2"Perpendicular gradient is (negative reciprocal, not just reciprocal)

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