A variable alone in math, as in 3y2 x n3 = 3y2n3 means to manipulate the lone variable by the factors afecting it.
It is to make the variable the subject of the equation.
An independent variable is exactly what it sounds like. It is a variable that stands alone and isn't changed by the other variables you are trying to measure. For example, someone's age might be an independent variable.
When the dependent variable is alone by itself, and everything else is at the other side.
how do you get a variable alone in a question? here is a example=== m-8=24 all you do is switch the question around so it would look like this=== 24+8=m m=32 TEE HEE
As it appears, there is no equation but an algebraic term.
No. In the variable x, alone, it is linear. In the variable y, alone, it is linear. But taken together, in x and y, you have a term which contains xy - that is, a term in which the powers of the unknowns add to 2. So the equation is not linear.
isolate the variable
Multiply both sides of the equation by 1.5
4y/4 = 3/4 y = 3/4
2.3a = 4.6 In order to leave the variable alone (without the coefficient), divide by 2.3 to both sidesa = 2
The x-axis of a graph is always your independent variable and the y-axis is the dependent variable. The independent variable is so called because it can stand alone as data and does not depend on other information to make sense.