Want this question answered?
No becauz it don't make sense.
A scatter plot, a line chart, a bar chart are some possible answers.
It is likely that a horizontal line on a graph will have the equation y=c, where c is a variable.
x = constant.
Displacement on the horizontal axis, velocity on the vertical, plot speed at 10m intervals, connect the points with a smooth line.
No becauz it don't make sense.
vertical and horizontal
A scatter plot, a line chart, a bar chart are some possible answers.
A bar graph uses vertical bars to display data. Each bar represents a category or group, and the height of the bar represents the value or frequency of that category. This type of graph is commonly used to compare and visualize data across different groups or categories.
It is likely that a horizontal line on a graph will have the equation y=c, where c is a variable.
The two variables plotted on a graph depend on the type of graph being used. In a typical line graph, the y-axis (vertical) represents the dependent variable, while the x-axis (horizontal) represents the independent variable.
A histogram is a type of graph where the bars are connected. Not separatted like a regular bar graph.
Vertical line. If you can draw a vertical line through some part of a graph and it will intersect with the graph twice, the graph isn't a function.
You can get semi-log or log-log graph paper. In the first, the horizontal axis is linear while the vertical axis has a logarithmic scale. You can always use the paper sideways so that the horizontal is logarithmic and the vertical linear. The second type has both axes with logarithmic scales. Alternatively, you calculate the appropriate values and plot the results using the usual Cartesian coordinate system.
A scatter plot, with months as the horizontal axis and sales on the vertical axis. Such a graph contains the same information as a bar chart without all the ink wasted in filling the bars. Either format is fine for checking seasonality, but a scatter plot is better for visually fitting a linear trend, if appropriate.
x = constant.
Displacement on the horizontal axis, velocity on the vertical, plot speed at 10m intervals, connect the points with a smooth line.