Distance from some fixed point.
The independent variable goes on the x-axis while the dependent variable goes on the y-axis. :)
An independent variable - if there is one - goes on the x- axis. There may not be an idependent variable: for example in a graph of peoples' height v weight (mass).An independent variable - if there is one - goes on the x- axis. There may not be an idependent variable: for example in a graph of peoples' height v weight (mass).An independent variable - if there is one - goes on the x- axis. There may not be an idependent variable: for example in a graph of peoples' height v weight (mass).An independent variable - if there is one - goes on the x- axis. There may not be an idependent variable: for example in a graph of peoples' height v weight (mass).
The variable that goes on the y axis is the dependent variable. This is the one that you measure, and do not control. The variable that goes on the x axis is the independent variable. This is the one that you control and change throughout the experiment. No other variables feature on the graph.
dependent is X and independent is Y so the axis (line) that goes horizontal (right to left) is X and has the dependent variable. the axis that goes vertically (up and down) is the Y axis and has the independent variable/
the dependent variable goes on the y- axis
the independent variable goes on the x-axis the dependent goes on the y-axis
The independent variable goes on the x-axis and the dependent variable goes on the y-axis.
The independent variable goes on the horizontal (x) axis.
The independent variable goes on the x-axis while the dependent variable goes on the y-axis. :)
An independent variable - if there is one - goes on the x- axis. There may not be an idependent variable: for example in a graph of peoples' height v weight (mass).An independent variable - if there is one - goes on the x- axis. There may not be an idependent variable: for example in a graph of peoples' height v weight (mass).An independent variable - if there is one - goes on the x- axis. There may not be an idependent variable: for example in a graph of peoples' height v weight (mass).An independent variable - if there is one - goes on the x- axis. There may not be an idependent variable: for example in a graph of peoples' height v weight (mass).
The variable that goes on the y axis is the dependent variable. This is the one that you measure, and do not control. The variable that goes on the x axis is the independent variable. This is the one that you control and change throughout the experiment. No other variables feature on the graph.
The independent variable goes on ther horizontal (x-axis) ; )
The x axis is horizontal; the y axis is vertical
You can determine which variable that goes on the x axis on a line graph by checking the number that comes first in a set of pair or from table, e.g [2,4]. 2 will be on the x axis because it is the first number in the pair
dependent is X and independent is Y so the axis (line) that goes horizontal (right to left) is X and has the dependent variable. the axis that goes vertically (up and down) is the Y axis and has the independent variable/
what you change and dependent variable is what you measure. :) Also, generally the independent variable goes on the x axis of any given graph, while the dependent goes on the y axis (except for specific types of graph characterized by their shape, such as rate of reaction graphs in chemistry)
When the horizontal variable goes from positive to negative.