you should watch that the graph equals 100 percent
A pie graph is another name for a circle graph: the numbers are represented by wedges which look something like thicker and thinner slices of pie. It is used (and useful) when comparing the proportions of numbers which together add up to 100% of something.
its a straightline. All points y where x is equal to 100. So its a vertical line covering the whole real line in the Y plane through x = 100
If you know what a graph of 1/x looks like, you have a good start. Just make your y units a 100 times bigger (write 100 where you'd normally write 1 and so on) and you've got a graph of y=100/x.If you don't know what 1/x looks like, I would suggest looking it up. It's good to know for future reference.If you are really stuck, it will almost always work out to just plot a few points and connect them with a line. Just recognize that for 100/x there is a discontinuity at 0 (since you can't divide by 0) and that there are no points in the second and fourth quadrants. At zero, the graph flies off to infinity onthe positive side and off to negative infinity on the negative side. There should not be anylines drawn across the y axis.
if you want to be specific, the equation should look like this:\ (10x10) + (8x7) so... 100 + 56 equals 156! try it in a calculator
you should watch that the graph equals 100 percent
a dot
it looks like a 100 square grid with 1 to 100 and you highlight all the prime numbers
It looks like a 70% full pie graph. Cant really illustrate it here. see related link below
A pie graph is another name for a circle graph: the numbers are represented by wedges which look something like thicker and thinner slices of pie. It is used (and useful) when comparing the proportions of numbers which together add up to 100% of something.
The phase change graph for water shows three main regions: solid (ice) melting into liquid water at 0°C, liquid water boiling into steam at 100°C, and steam condensing back into liquid water at 100°C. These transitions occur at stable temperatures and pressures.
its a straightline. All points y where x is equal to 100. So its a vertical line covering the whole real line in the Y plane through x = 100
If you know what a graph of 1/x looks like, you have a good start. Just make your y units a 100 times bigger (write 100 where you'd normally write 1 and so on) and you've got a graph of y=100/x.If you don't know what 1/x looks like, I would suggest looking it up. It's good to know for future reference.If you are really stuck, it will almost always work out to just plot a few points and connect them with a line. Just recognize that for 100/x there is a discontinuity at 0 (since you can't divide by 0) and that there are no points in the second and fourth quadrants. At zero, the graph flies off to infinity onthe positive side and off to negative infinity on the negative side. There should not be anylines drawn across the y axis.
if you want to be specific, the equation should look like this:\ (10x10) + (8x7) so... 100 + 56 equals 156! try it in a calculator
100
it looks like a silver coin with 100 on it
A line graph works best for temperature since temperature can vary over 100 degrees in a year in places like Idaho.