Straight Lines
"The straight line is the shortest distance between two points. Its equation is the simplest curve that fills a plane."
1. Chapter Overview
The STRAIGHT LINE is fundamental to COORDINATE GEOMETRY. This chapter covers: SLOPE (gradient), the SIX FORMS of the equation of a line (point-slope, two-point, slope-intercept, intercept, normal, general), conditions for PARALLEL and PERPENDICULAR lines, the ANGLE between two lines, and the DISTANCE of a point from a line.
2. Slope (Gradient) of a Line
Definition
- The slope (m) of a line is the tangent of the angle it makes with the POSITIVE x-axis: m = tan θ
- For two points (x₁, y₁) and (x₂, y₂): m = (y₂ — y₁) / (x₂ — x₁)
- Horizontal line: m = 0
- Vertical line: m = undefined (denominator = 0)
- Rising line (left to right): m > 0. Falling line: m < 0.
Parallel and Perpendicular Lines
- PARALLEL: m₁ = m₂ (slopes equal)
- PERPENDICULAR: m₁ × m₂ = -1 (product of slopes = -1)
3. Six Forms of the Equation of a Line
| Form | Equation | When to Use |
|---|---|---|
| Point-Slope | y — y₁ = m(x — x₁) | You know ONE point and the slope |
| Two-Point | (y — y₁)/(x — x₁) = (y₂ — y₁)/(x₂ — x₁) | You know TWO points on the line |
| Slope-Intercept | y = mx + c | You know slope and y-INTERCEPT |
| Intercept Form | x/a + y/b = 1 | You know x-intercept (a) and y-intercept (b) |
| Normal Form | x cos ω + y sin ω = p | You know perpendicular distance from origin (p) and its angle (ω) |
| General Form | Ax + By + C = 0 | The UNIVERSAL form. Slope = -A/B. Intercepts: x = -C/A, y = -C/B. |
4. Angle Between Two Lines
For lines with slopes m₁ and m₂:
- θ is the ACUTE angle between the lines
- If m₁m₂ = -1 → lines are PERPENDICULAR → θ = 90°
- If m₁ = m₂ → lines are PARALLEL → θ = 0°
5. Distance of a Point from a Line
For the general form Ax + By + C = 0 and point (x₁, y₁):
The NUMERATOR is the absolute value (distance is always positive).
6. Distance Between Two Parallel Lines
For two parallel lines Ax + By + C₁ = 0 and Ax + By + C₂ = 0:
7. Other Key Concepts
Collinearity of Three Points
- Three points are COLLINEAR if the slopes between any two pairs are EQUAL, OR if the area of the triangle they form is ZERO.
Area of Triangle (Coordinate Geometry)
- Area = ½ |x₁(y₂ — y₃) + x₂(y₃ — y₁) + x₃(y₁ — y₂)|
- If area = 0 → points are COLLINEAR
Concurrent Lines
- Three or more lines passing through a SINGLE POINT
8. Exam Focus
- Slope — definition, formula, parallel/perpendicular conditions
- Six forms of the line equation — know ALL, when each is used
- Angle between two lines formula
- Distance of point from line formula
- Distance between parallel lines
9. Key Formulas
- Slope: m = (y₂-y₁)/(x₂-x₁) = tan θ
- Point-slope: y — y₁ = m(x — x₁)
- Slope-intercept: y = mx + c
- General: Ax + By + C = 0. Slope = -A/B.
- Distance of point from line: |Ax₁ + By₁ + C| / √(A² + B²)
- Angle between lines: tan θ = |(m₁-m₂)/(1+m₁m₂)|
10. Conclusion
The straight line is the BUILDING BLOCK of coordinate geometry:
- SLOPE: Tells you the line's steepness and direction
- SIX FORMS: Each suited to a different situation. Know them all. Convert between them.
- PARALLEL: m₁ = m₂. PERPENDICULAR: m₁m₂ = -1.
- DISTANCE: The perpendicular distance from a point to a line. One elegant formula.
'Geometry is the art of correct reasoning from incorrectly drawn figures.' — Henri Poincaré. But the straight line, when combined with algebra, makes the reasoning perfectly precise.
