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A graph about masses and volumes would represent density.
When the vertical axis represents "number of things" and the horizontal represents "volume of the thing"---slope is change in vertical over change in horizontal, so units of the slope would be "number/volume", which is density.
You just write a title that sums up your graph a the top, such as "Number of People from Different Countries that like Salad".
i would put different colors on the graph or i will put the sports on one side and the number of students who like that sport on the graph
That graph completely depends on your location on Earth. Any two different latitudes will produce two different graphs.
Two different substances
A comparing graph is a graph that compares number to see if they similar or different.
A bar graph cannot have classes with different width. The height of a bar graph represents the frequency attributed to that class whereas in a histogram the area of a "bar" is proportional to the frequency, the height represents the frequency density.
I'd use a bar graph.
A graph about masses and volumes would represent density.
When the vertical axis represents "number of things" and the horizontal represents "volume of the thing"---slope is change in vertical over change in horizontal, so units of the slope would be "number/volume", which is density.
You just write a title that sums up your graph a the top, such as "Number of People from Different Countries that like Salad".
i would put different colors on the graph or i will put the sports on one side and the number of students who like that sport on the graph
That graph completely depends on your location on Earth. Any two different latitudes will produce two different graphs.
There are a number of different graphs to show the sales of flowers. You can use a bar graph or a pie charge to show these sales for example.
because its a circular graph?
cyclomatic number of a graph is e.n+1 where e is number of edge of graph and n is number of node in graoh g