No, it could be a qualitative variable.
It depends on the information being plotted. It is often the independent variable.
The horizontal axis usually represents the independent variable. One example is time. Time will change regardless of what problem you are analyzing with a graph. It could be seconds elapsed in a motion graph. Or it could be months, in a sales chart, for example. Distance could be another example of an independent variable. It just depends on what type of problem you are graphing.
the horizontal axis for chart is called X-axis.
It is the horizontal line at the bottom of the chart.
The Nolan chart's two axes represent personal and economic freedom.
It depends on the information being plotted. It is often the independent variable.
Price and quantity demanded are both interdependent: there is not an independent variable. From that point of view, there is no reason to put one variable on the x-axis rather than the other.However, putting price on the horizontal axis makes it simpler to add the supply curve on the same chart, and then study the market equilibrium.Price and quantity demanded are both interdependent: there is not an independent variable. From that point of view, there is no reason to put one variable on the x-axis rather than the other.However, putting price on the horizontal axis makes it simpler to add the supply curve on the same chart, and then study the market equilibrium.Price and quantity demanded are both interdependent: there is not an independent variable. From that point of view, there is no reason to put one variable on the x-axis rather than the other.However, putting price on the horizontal axis makes it simpler to add the supply curve on the same chart, and then study the market equilibrium.Price and quantity demanded are both interdependent: there is not an independent variable. From that point of view, there is no reason to put one variable on the x-axis rather than the other.However, putting price on the horizontal axis makes it simpler to add the supply curve on the same chart, and then study the market equilibrium.
The independent variable is on the horizontal axis.
The horizontal axis usually represents the independent variable. One example is time. Time will change regardless of what problem you are analyzing with a graph. It could be seconds elapsed in a motion graph. Or it could be months, in a sales chart, for example. Distance could be another example of an independent variable. It just depends on what type of problem you are graphing.
It is a [horizontal] bar chart.It is a [horizontal] bar chart.It is a [horizontal] bar chart.It is a [horizontal] bar chart.
the horizontal axis for chart is called X-axis.
A bar chart is a graph in the form of boxes of different heights, with each box representing a different category of data, and each height representing a frequency.
A bar chart usually consists of vertical bars but could also be horizontal.
It depends on what you are trying to represent. Here are some:x-y plot, where typically the independent variable is the horizontal axis, and the resulting measurement at particular values of the independent variable are plotted on the vertical. Example would be position (vertical) vs time (horizontal), or amount of expansion (vertical) vs temperature (horizontal).Histogram or bar-chart, where the data is categorized by some critieria, and the amount in each category is vertical. As a bar chart the categories could be anything - colors, species, seasons. In a histogram, the categories are ranges of values (ages, frequencies in a spectrum, etc.)Pie chart is useful to show the proportion or percentage of each measurement as related to the whole. Here are some links, that may help.http://www.mathsisfun.com/data/histograms.htmlhttp://nces.ed.gov/nceskids/createAgraph/
horizontal bar chart
It is the horizontal line at the bottom of the chart.
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