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A bar graph works well in this case
A scatter plot. Most other graphs will summarise some of the data.
if you are graphing a change over time, a line graph. if you are comparing data, it's a bar graph.
The most common plots are bar charts and scatter/ line plots. Scatter plots as used in the Excel program, have continuous scales on the x and y coordinates. So, if your data is measured on a continuous scale, which includes many physical measurements are (ie: temperature, weights, speed, lengths or heights) then a scatter plot makes sense.
It depends. Some are a cm and other's are bigger. Most commonly it's a cm by cm.
Line Graph
A scatter graph.
pig graph
A bar graph works well in this case
Most graphs: Pie charts, bar graphs, histograms, scatter graphs can all be used.
A scatter plot. Most other graphs will summarise some of the data.
Line graphs are most commonly used.
if you are graphing a change over time, a line graph. if you are comparing data, it's a bar graph.
I would be tempted to use a box-plot or a scatter graph. Those are the first two that come to mind.
The most common plots are bar charts and scatter/ line plots. Scatter plots as used in the Excel program, have continuous scales on the x and y coordinates. So, if your data is measured on a continuous scale, which includes many physical measurements are (ie: temperature, weights, speed, lengths or heights) then a scatter plot makes sense.
This could be called a "Circle Graph" or a "Pie Chart". They are most commonly used for displaying percentages and other statistics.
It can be used for either, but it is most commonly used for quantitive.