If you are paid on an hourly rate, the number of hours that you work and your pay will be in direct variation.
No. This is not true. It is false. The equation is an example of direct variation.
Yes. That's a great example.
A direct variation (!) or direct reelationship.
No, it is not a direct variation.
If you are paid on an hourly rate, the number of hours that you work and your pay will be in direct variation.
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 not true. It is false. The equation is an example of direct variation.
Yes. That's a great example.
A direct variation (!) or direct reelationship.
Direct variation is not a special case.
Yes, it is direct variation.
No, it is not a 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!
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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 .