No, this is an inverse variation.
direct varation is when both x and y rise and decrease by the same number. inverse is when x or y decreases, the other one increases by the same number
im not say that defferent.my question is inverse variation as a proportion.pls answerbecause i dont know the answer
No. This is not true. It is false. The equation is an example of direct variation.
I have recently been doing all these direct variation problems but not every linear relationship is a direct variation... But every direct variation is a linear relation!
If a variable X is in inverse variation with a variable Y, then it is in direct variation with the variable (1/Y).
Direct variation is the ratio of two variable is constant. Inverse variation is when the product of two variable is constant. For example, direct variation is y = kx and indirect variation would be y = k/x .
No, this is an inverse variation.
Inverse variation does not pass through the origin, however direct variation always passes through the origin.
xy=k
Suppose the two variables are denoted by X and Y. If Y is a constant multiple of X, that is Y = c*X, then the variation is direct. If the value of X*Y is a constant, that is Y = c/X, then the variation in inverse.
direct varation is when both x and y rise and decrease by the same number. inverse is when x or y decreases, the other one increases by the same number
im not say that defferent.my question is inverse variation as a proportion.pls answerbecause i dont know the answer
No. This is not true. It is false. The equation is an example of direct variation.
The constant.
I have recently been doing all these direct variation problems but not every linear relationship is a direct variation... But every direct variation is a linear relation!
variation