The Y axis is the vertical access, in other words the one that goes up and down. The X access is horizontal and so it goes across a chart. The Y axis is sometimes known as the value axis.
The y- axis in the vertical axis and the x-axis in the horizantal axis
In the coordinate plane, the x-axis is horizontal, and the y-axis is vertical.
The convention for an x-y graph is as follows: y | | |_____ x where the x-axis is horizontal and the y-axis is vertical.
Yes it does exist. And the question is ...
the y axis in excel is also known as the value axis
The Y axis is the vertical access, in other words the one that goes up and down. The X access is horizontal and so it goes across a chart. The Y axis is sometimes known as the value axis.
The 'sum' function.Type =sum(X,Y) - bold for emphasis - where X and Y are your cell locations or values, and Excel will return the sum (i.e. the result of addition) of those values.
On a graph the x axis is the one going across the screen, the horizontal axis, and the y axis is going up or down, the vertical axis. A very simple way of remember is to think that the letter x looks like a cross. The letter x is a cross, and the x axis goes across the screen.
The y- axis in the vertical axis and the x-axis in the horizantal axis
No, it's the horizontal axis (x-axis).
In classical Cartesian algebra, the x axis is defined as a horizontal number line defining the distance from a zero point called the "origin." The y axis is a vertical line defining the vertical distance from the same origin. This system has been adapted to define axes on any number of graphing systems, from Microsoft Excel to modern machine tools.
The Y-Axis.
The x-axis comes first. because x comes before y.
The vertical axis is the y-axis. The horizontal axis is the x-axis.
In the coordinate plane, the x-axis is horizontal, and the y-axis is vertical.
The x axis is horizontal and the y axis is vertical.