Independent
Independent Variable c:
The indipendant variable
The responding variable is presented on the vertical axis.
a line graph
Generally speaking yes. It would be assumed when looking at a graph that the x axis is the variable you are able to change and so the y axis would be the result.
dependent variable always go on y.axis on the graph.
The independent variable is typically placed on the x-axis in a graph or chart.
In some cases it isn't always accurate.
The independent variable typically goes on the x-axis and the dependent variable goes on the y-axis in a line graph for science.
Never. You can use a column graph, or a scatter graph or even a superimposition of the two but there a column scatter graph does not exist.
Any 2-dimensional graph - column/bar, line, scattergram will do the trick. It is difficult, though not impossible, to show such a relationship with a series of pie charts.
The independent variable is always on the x-axis of a coordinate plane. The dependent variable is always on the y-axis. This is true because y always depends on x.
The x-axis of a graph is always your independent variable and the y-axis is the dependent variable. The independent variable is so called because it can stand alone as data and does not depend on other information to make sense.
A bar graph is used to compare and contrast while the column graph is used to count things
x=3 means that the x variable always stays constant, so the y variable can change as much as it wants, but x will always be 3. on a graph, this would like a vertical line. (It should be perpendicular to the x variable's line...if that helps a visual:P)
Always when using a line graph use the x-axis for independent variable and the y-axis for dependent variable.
On a line graph, where is the dependent variable placed?