I suggest you go to your math book and look at an example of graphs. Basically, it is a box with labels on the bottom (horizontal axis) of the box representing the items you are graphing and along the vertical axis you will have data. You will put in bars of different colors to represent the data corresponding with the labels. A double bar graph would be two of these.
I know two parts of making a bar graph is Title, and Labels.
1. Title 2. Labels 3. scales 4. Bars
A title.
To make a good graph title, just state what your graph is about. If the line graph (example) shows the population of England, your graph title should be 'Population of England Over Time'.
to tell them why you made this graph
It stands for Title, Axis, Intervals, Labels, and Scale. Hope this helped!
Description (title) of the chart so that you know what the chart is intended to display; Labels for categories (or independent variable), with scale, if appropriate; and Values for dependent variable with scale.
I know two parts of making a bar graph is Title, and Labels.
title,axis,interval,label and scale
1. Title 2. Labels 3. scales 4. Bars
All graphs must have a title, an axis, labels, intervals, and a scale. You can remember this using the acronym TAILS: title, axis, intervals, scale.
A title.
Essentials for graphing will depend on the type of graph used. For example a bar graph has five essential components. These are the title, labels, scales and bars. A circle graph only has three essentials. These are the circle, the title, and the key.
The title, legend ( or key) and axes labels all contribute.
Axes, title, Key (if needed, also called a legend), Axis labels
title axis labels units don't know any more but I hope that helps.... Equation of line.
scale, title,compass rose, symbols, legend, lines of longitude, lines of latitude, labels, and colors.