units of measurments and labels
All direct variation graphs are linear and they all go through the origin.
Do all linear graphs have proportional relationship
Polynomials have graphs that look like graphs of their leading terms because all other changes to polynomial functions only cause transformations of the leading term's graph.
No.
units of measurments and labels
Some data.
All graphs must have a title, an axis, labels, intervals, and a scale. You can remember this using the acronym TAILS: title, axis, intervals, scale.
actualy not all do... most use them tho,
Nonrepresentational graphics include: tables, forms, bar graphs, line graphs, pie graphs and instrument gauges.
Bar graphs can compare two sets of data, as well as line graphs and circle graphs. To better improve my answer, double line graphs and double bar graphs compare two sets of data. Circle graphs cannot however, because they compare parts of a whole instead of, as a bar graph would, the amount of something. A circle graph is also incapable of showing data growth over a period of time, as line graphs do. All in all, circle graphs cannot compare to sets of data, and bar graphs and line graphs must be doubled to do so.
All graphs are graphical graphs because if they were not graphical graphs they would not be graphs!
All direct variation graphs are linear and they all go through the origin.
Most graphs: Pie charts, bar graphs, histograms, scatter graphs can all be used.
Do all linear graphs have proportional relationship
they all compare different amounts
Polynomials have graphs that look like graphs of their leading terms because all other changes to polynomial functions only cause transformations of the leading term's graph.