Fnd the lowest value and subtract it from the highest value.
a line graph would do the best or you could do the bar graph but it would be a bit longer to do
Decide how large you want the graph to be. Divide the range by the size and that determines the approximate scale. The exact scale will be slightly different because the maximum and minimum on the axis will normally be "round" numbers.
range is the y values in a graph otherwise known as a function; for example in the graph y= abs(x), the graph is a v with the vertex at the origin and the range is (0,infinity).
On a coordinate grid, range is the y-axis.
Take the largest value in the graph and subtract the smallest value from it.
You do not graph range and domain: you can determine the range and domain of a graph. The domain is the set of all the x-values and the range is is the set of all the y-values that are used in the graph.
a line graph would do the best or you could do the bar graph but it would be a bit longer to do
A line graph
There are seven steps which are: 1. Identify the variables 2. Determine the variable range 3. Determine the scale of the graph 4. Number and label each axis 5. Plot the data points 6. Draw the graph 7. Title the graph
you cant
stem and leaf
i think it is about -40 degrees because it is very cold in outer spae and i looked it up on this graph sheet
Decide how large you want the graph to be. Divide the range by the size and that determines the approximate scale. The exact scale will be slightly different because the maximum and minimum on the axis will normally be "round" numbers.
range is the y values in a graph otherwise known as a function; for example in the graph y= abs(x), the graph is a v with the vertex at the origin and the range is (0,infinity).
no
You find the highest and lowest temperatures in the graph and find the difference
Line graph