Both dependent and independent variables must be either a measure or a count. When you collect the data the independent variable often (but not always) is a whole number. As an example: A plant grew 1.5" the first day, 1.3" the second day...
The growth (in inches) is plotted on the Y-axis and is dependent on the time (days) interval over which the growth rate was measured. Days plot on the X-axis as the independent variable.
The measurable variable is the variable that is measured in an experiment. It changes depending on the adjustment of the independent variable.
either independent or dependent
This is the variable which changes as a result of what you change in the experiment. If you change the height from which you drop a ball, you may observe the height to which it bounces. The height of the bounce is the outcome variable.
Independent variable is what you change in the experiment group. Dependent variable is what happens because of the independent variable. It has to be measurable in degrees, inches, or other such measurements.
The independent variable.
Independent, it is in the name, more variables are: dependant variable- the one you keep the same control variable- mearsuring variable
Changes in the independent variable are independent of changes in any other variable,
The independent variable.
the dependent variable changes with the independent variable. the independent variable only changes when changed by the experimenter. Time is usually an independent variable.
The independent variable of an experiment is the variable that you change, and the dependent variable is the result of the independent variable.
The Independent variable is the one you control. The dependent variable is controlled by the Independent Variable.
Math: Independent variable is what you change. Dependent variable is what you measure.