label the axises
They usually contain a "break" in the graph, which would be on the left side of the graph.
A continuous graph.
an origin can not be drawn because its (0,0) the middle of the graph
Yes.
Graphs can mislead people by the way they are prepared. See related links for good examples of misleading graphs. When you see a graph, you are seeing a summary of the data. Sometimes our data is misleading, so the graph is just presenting misleading data. For example, I show a graph of how much men and women make each year at a company. I see men make more every year, while women just stay about the same. Perhaps the company just has one woman working there. Perhaps in her job, there are no salary increases. I can also not start the y-axis at zero, to exagerrate the differences. A chart should include all the data. Excluding some data can result in a misleading graph. However, in a graph showing changes over period of time, the preparer of the graph has to chose how long a period is relavent. If we are explaining global warming, a plot showing 100 years might be good. But a graph of car accidents per year, perhaps 5 years is more reasonable.
It could skip numbers, such as if you are counting by 3's (3,6,9,12,15) then it could have wrong numbers, and there could also be other misleading stuff too. +++ It could be misleading if the values themselves are incorrect, or if the line is a best-fit trace drawn erroneously, perhaps on a graph of points that genuinely do not really follow a discreet numerical law.
A graph that leads you to think something else
No titles or axis' No numbers Or making the graph difficult to read
Make graph votes like 4 votes apart
They usually contain a "break" in the graph, which would be on the left side of the graph.
A continuous graph.
Incorrectly plotted points.
the curve should be located in the center of the graph.
an origin can not be drawn because its (0,0) the middle of the graph
In graph theory, a planar graph is a graph that can be embedded in the plane, i.e., it can be drawn on the plane in such a way that its edges intersect only at their endpoints. In other words, it can be drawn in such a way that no edges cross each other.
The conclusion that can be drawn from this graph is that as the mass of an object increases, its density also increases. This is indicated by the positive slope of the line on the graph, showing a direct relationship between mass and density.
Yes.