The X axis.
Oh, dude, when you graph, you typically go across first, like left to right on the x-axis, and then up or down on the y-axis. It's like following a map, but with numbers and stuff. So, yeah, you go across before you go up or down.
It is a function whose graph starts in the top left and goes to the bottom right. There could be some intervals in which the graph moves upwards to the right. This follows from the definition of average rate of change.
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!
The graph shifts to the right.
Top right.
On a standard Cartesian graph, there are two axes. The Y axis runs vertically, bottom to top and the X axis runs horizontally from left to right.
X Axis
It is OFTEN the x axis, but not always. Sometimes it is the t-axis (for time). In basic economics it could be quantity (q), in demographics it could be age (y, for years). There are many alternatives.
A horizontal line is a line that goes across (left to right or right to left).
Yes because you need the data on the right and across the bottom to make the graph
Written on a line across the page but centered on the page
downward as they proceed from left to right across a graph
There are many graphs which while you can usually use most of them no matter what experiment you are doing that is not always true, nor is it the right use of a graph. some of the most likely graphs you will probably come across , or for that matter need to use are bar graphs, line graphs, pie graphs, and picture graphs.
Generally the x-axis is displayed on a 2-dimensional Cartesian Coordinate system running horizontally (left to right - for negative to positive values of x) In a 3-D graph, the x-axis is usually shown running diagonally from upper right to lower left (for negative to positive values of x) . In a 3-D graph, the y-axis is the one running horizontally and the z-axis is vertical.
Planets appear to move horizontally when they are in that part of the ecliptic that lies horizontally across the southern horizon at midnight (seen from the northern hemisphere). That occurs when a planet is at a right-ascension of 18 hours (in Sagittarius), and a couple of hours either side. A snapshot of the planet taken every night at midnight shows it moving horizontally (approximately) from right to left. All planets do this.
left to right --------------------------------
Oh, dude, when you graph, you typically go across first, like left to right on the x-axis, and then up or down on the y-axis. It's like following a map, but with numbers and stuff. So, yeah, you go across before you go up or down.