A bar graph.
a math table is a table that show a graph show or any other problem or to make a graph that shows information
Every graph shows comparisons of some kind or another.
The line on the graph that shows what the data is saying.
A circle graph.
a line graph
Bar graph
This is known as a demand curve, with the demand (quantities willing to purchase) plotted on horizontal versus price per unit plotted on vertical axis.
a bar graph
A linear graph shows a linear equation in which the value of one variable depends on the value of the other variable.
The production possibility frontier graph shows the various quantities of two products that can be produced. The two products may be shown on either axis.
Both show an amount of data, usually during a survey. One shows a number, but the other shows a percentage.
A graph that shows proportions of different parts (of a whole) is a Pie chart.
a pie graph shows percentages and a bar graph shows numbers and amounts
A pie graph shows parts of a whole
A bar graph shows discreet data, but other types can also.
a graph law graph shows the relationship between pressure and volume
I would argue that the best graph would be the bar graph, and if you can get it to be labeled with the numbers, then that's even better. Quantities of what, though? It depends on what information you're trying to present. If it's finances and this is a professional (I'm only assuming) setting, then I probably would choose either a pie chart or a scatter plot (pref. with lines connecting each drop or rise in the visual)...it's up to you, though. Which works best for what you're trying to convey?