any points along the line described by the equation x=anything will give you a vertical line on a graph
You need to use a graphing calculator.Go to: Y = > Y = (type any number) > GraphYour line will be VERTICAL!!!!!!!!!|||||||||||||
That would be a bar graph.
No becauz it don't make sense.
Well first you need to have x coordinate. Lets say x=0 and y=2, y is the line that is vertical and x is the line that is horizontal. Now you can remember this by over and out. First you do is the x coordinate which is 0. So you move left and/or right 0 times. If its a positive number then you move right on the x line and if its negative number you move left on the x line. But the number 0 is not a negative or positive number so you just keep the number 0 in the middle of the graph. Do not make a mark where the 0 coordinate was supposed to go. Just try to remember where the coordinate is supposed to go. Now its time to do the y coordinate which is 2. So you move up and/or down 2 times. If its a positive number then you move up on the y line and if its a negative number then you move down on the y line. The number 2 is a positive number and goes on the y line so you move up 2 times. So remember where the x coordinate was? Put your pencil there and move up 2. That's how you graph y=2. Hope it helps!
any points along the line described by the equation x=anything will give you a vertical line on a graph
Line graph
increasing the interval would decreasing the degrees of accuracy of the graph, optically the line seem flatter
You need to use a graphing calculator.Go to: Y = > Y = (type any number) > GraphYour line will be VERTICAL!!!!!!!!!|||||||||||||
you make a line graph and then put a scale on it
how do you make a banana line graph
The units are whatever you make them! It helps, though if the units are the same on the x-axis (horizontal axis) as well. Unless of course you are skipping from zero to some large number before you start your graph. Anyway, you can make each line one unit, or you can make each line 5 units, or whatever you want! Depends on what you're graphing, but usually for a straight line, you use units of 1
That would be a bar graph.
No. A vertical line on a speed/time graph would indicate that the object's speed changed from one value to another in zero time. Another way to describe it would be to say that it had infinite acceleration. Neither description is physically possible.
linear: LINE example--- line non-linear: not a LINE example--- parabola The other possibility is a graph with a non-linear scale. First a linear scale will have each unit represent the same amount, regardless of where you are on the scale. A semilog scale, has a linear scale in the horizontal direction, and a logarithmic scale in the vertical direction. Exponential functions (such as ex & 10x), will graph as a straight line on this type of graph scale). A logarithmic or log-log scale, has logarithmic scales on both horizontal and vertical axis. Power functions (such as sqrt(x), x2 and x3), graph as a straight line on these scales. See Related Link
you make a line graph and then put a scale on it
First make the number line by drawing a horizontal line with an arrow at each end. Then put 7 or more evenly-spaced, vertical hatch marks ( very short vertical lines that extend about 1/8" above and below the horizontal line). Below the rightmost hatch mark put 0 (zero) , and then put the 6 negative numbers below the hatch marks to the left of zero. Put dots on the number line where the hatch marks for -5 and -6 cross it.