You kinda need to be more specific about the context. But that never stopped me from trying! If you are looking at a 2 dimensional graph then the X-axis drawn from horizontally (left-right). The X-coordinate is the position along the X-axis. Happy plotting!
Quadrant II (Quadrant 2) is the region of the coordinate plane (xy-plane, a graph) that is above the x-axis and to the left of the y-axis. In this quadrant, all x values are positive and all y values are negative.
10
sin(0) = 0 but, in general, the sine graph need not start at 0. For example, sin(x + 2) does not start at 0.
-7
So the two zeros on a coordinate plane is the origin.
x2+(y-x2/3)2=1
You kinda need to be more specific about the context. But that never stopped me from trying! If you are looking at a 2 dimensional graph then the X-axis drawn from horizontally (left-right). The X-coordinate is the position along the X-axis. Happy plotting!
If movement is in two dimensions: the x-coordinate of the velocity, and the y-coordinate of the velocity. Or alternatively: the magnitude of the velocity, and the direction. If movement is in three dimensions, you need to know three things, for example, x-coordinate, y-coordinate, and z-coordinate of the velocity, or magnitude of the velocity and two components of direction.
2
When the data on the graph is continuous,it does make sense to connect the points on the graph of 2 related variables.
Well first you need to have x coordinate. Lets say x=0 and y=2, y is the line that is vertical and x is the line that is horizontal. Now you can remember this by over and out. First you do is the x coordinate which is 0. So you move left and/or right 0 times. If its a positive number then you move right on the x line and if its negative number you move left on the x line. But the number 0 is not a negative or positive number so you just keep the number 0 in the middle of the graph. Do not make a mark where the 0 coordinate was supposed to go. Just try to remember where the coordinate is supposed to go. Now its time to do the y coordinate which is 2. So you move up and/or down 2 times. If its a positive number then you move up on the y line and if its a negative number then you move down on the y line. The number 2 is a positive number and goes on the y line so you move up 2 times. So remember where the x coordinate was? Put your pencil there and move up 2. That's how you graph y=2. Hope it helps!
a bar graph is just a graph but a double bar graph compares 2 things!
The point in a Cartesian coordinate system where the axes intersect. On a 2-D graph, for example, this is where x and y equal zero. also the point (0,0) on a graph
No. y=2x+5, right? substitute 2 in for "x" as that is your x-coordinate y=2*2+5 = 4+5 = 9 which is not your given y-coordinate.
You can use coordinate grids formapsA graphAnd lots of other things but those are the 2 most common ones.
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