How do you find the slope of a curve at a point? Calculus Derivatives Slope of a Curve at a Point 1 Answer Wataru Sep 21, 2014 If the curve is the graph of a function f(x), then the slope of the curve at the point x=a can be found by f'(a). Answer link Related questions How do I find the slope of a curve at a point? Slope of a curve y=x^2-3 at the point where x=1? How do you use the derivative to find the slope of a curve at a point? How do you find the slope of a demand curve? What is the slope of the tangent line at a minimum of a smooth curve? How do you find the Slope of the curve y=sqrt(x) at the point where x=4? How do you find the slope of the tangent line using the formal definition of a limit? How do you find the slope of the tangent line to the graph of f(x)=-x^2+4sqrt(x) at x = 4? What is the slope of the line tangent to the graph of the function f(x)=ln(sin^2(x+3)) at the... How do you find the slope of the tangent to the curve y^3x+y^2x^2=6 at (2,1)? See all questions in Slope of a Curve at a Point Impact of this question 6940 views around the world You can reuse this answer Creative Commons License