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The title of a graph should be an indication of the information that the graph is meant to convey. It may not be a direct description of the data but it should certainly be relevant to the data being used. For example, a graph showing number of residents against years might have a title of "Growth in the town". The title refers not to the data but to the information the graph is showing.
The title of a graph should be an indication of the information that the graph is meant to convey. It may not be a direct description of the data but it should certainly be relevant to the data being used. For example, a graph showing number of residents against years might have a title of "Growth in the town". The title refers not to the data but to the information the graph is showing.
You find the main idea of the graph then make the title based on that.
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'.
It refers to the amount of drugs he buys during the movie. (joke not the real answer)
it describes the data shown simply in a short phrase
on top on the graph
to tell them why you made this graph
The scales and title applied to the graph's axes.
At the Top.
The first step in reading a graph is to look at the title to learn what the graph is about.
Because it should help indicate what the graph is about.