yes. 2 variables can be written in one statement. take for example the equation y=3x+5, as long as you have a single solution to work with there can be 2 variables.
The two types of variables are the CONSTANT and CONTROL.
An equation with two variables . . . seriously!An equation with one variable can be can be solved, but when there are two variables, you need two equations. This is called a system of two equations in two variables.Three equations in three variables, etc.
a diagram that tells how two variables are related
Straight line equations have two variables in the form of x and y
You can swap two variables, by storing one of them temporarily in a third variable, like this: temp = a; a = b; b = temp; Inside a function, this won't work, because the function parameters are COPIES of the original variables, not the variables themselves. Any change won't affect the original variables. If you work with OBJECTS, and swap the CONTENTS of the objects (not the object pointers), it can work, though.
cause n affect
The two variables that affect friction are the surface roughness of the materials in contact and the force pressing the surfaces together. As the roughness increases or the force increases, friction typically increases as well.
Alkali metals and noble gases
Only two variables affect batting average - hits and at-bats.
Its arbitrary - that's how the word (work) is defined.
No. The units of the two variables in a correlation will not change the value of the correlation coefficient.
The number of links and the authority of the sites from which the links orginate.
The two variables that affect an object's kinetic energy are the object's mass and its velocity. Kinetic energy is calculated using the formula KE = 0.5 * mass * velocity^2, so both of these variables play a crucial role in determining the amount of kinetic energy an object possesses.
the international marketing variables that affect coke.
by the rate of population, types, habitats, and the numbers decreasing.
variables