The formula for circle at center $(a,b)$ with radius $r$ is: $(x -a)^2 + (y-b)^2 = r^2$.
Os if you have three points $(x_1,y_2), (x_2,y_2)$ and $(x_3,y_3)$ then they all belong to a circle and you know:
1: $(x_1 - a)^2 + (y_1-b)^2 = r^2$ and
2: $(x_2 - a)^2 + (y_2-b)^2 = r^2$ and
3: $(x_3 - a)^2 + (y_3-b)^2 = r^2$
Use those three equations and solve for $a,b,r$ using $x_i, y_i$ as constants.
I trust that you will be able to figure that out.
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Although it probably easier to find the equation of the line going through $A = (x_1,y_1)$ and $B = (x_2, y_2)$. [It is $y = m_1 x + b_1$. To find $m_1, b_1$ plug in $(x_1, y_1)$ and $(x_2, y_2)$ and see what you get.].
Take the midpoint $(x_m, y_m)$ of $A$ and $B$ and the find the equation of the perpendicular through the midpoint of $A,B$. [It is $y = -\frac 1{m_1} + b_m$. Plug in $x_m, y_m$ to solve for $b_m$].
Do that for the points $B$ and $C = (x_3, y_3)$ to get lint $y= m_2 + b_2$ and and the midpoint $(x_{m_2}, y_{m_2})$ so the perpendicular line $y= -\frac 1{m_2} + b_{m_2}$].
Find the intersection of the perpendicular lines at $(a,b)$ [by solving plugging $(a,b)$ into both $y = -\frac 1{m_1} + b_m$ and $y= -\frac 1{m_2} + b_{m_2}$]
That use geometry reasoning to conclude those lines intersect at the center of the circle.
The radius will $r = d(A,(a,b)) = d(B, (a,b)) = d(C, (a,b))$ wher $d((x_1, y_1), (a,b)) = \sqrt {(x_1 -a)^2 + (y_2-b)^2}$