At a constant rate:
distance = time x speed
Since you are calculating the distance based on the other two numbers, I would say that distance is the dependent variable (it is based on the values of the other variables).
Dependent variables and independent variables refer to values that change in relationship to each other. The dependent variables are those that are observed to change in response to the independent variables. The independent variables are those that are deliberately manipulated to invoke a change in the dependent variables. In short, "if x is given, then y occurs", where x represents the independent variables and y represents the dependent variables. Depending on the context, independent variables are also known as predictor variables, regressors, controlled variables, manipulated variables, explanatory variables, or input variables. The dependent variable is also known as the response variable, the regressand, the measured variable, the responding variable, the explained variable, the outcome variable, the experimental variable or the output variable. This answer was coppied onto this page by tom hills of falmouth waii
Every time the independent variables change, the dependent variables change.Dependent variables cannot change if the independent variables didn't change.
Independent variables are those that you change in an experiment. Dependent variables are the ones that you measure in an experiment. Dependent variables are influenced by the independent variables that you change, so they are dependent upon the independent variable. Generally, experiments should have only one independent variable.
True.
Independent variables are the input value of a function (usually x) and dependent variables are the output value of the function (usually y).
Depends on the relationship between the independent and dependent variables.
Dependent variables and independent variables refer to values that change in relationship to each other. The dependent variables are those that are observed to change in response to the independent variables. The independent variables are those that are deliberately manipulated to invoke a change in the dependent variables. In short, "if x is given, then y occurs", where x represents the independent variables and y represents the dependent variables. Depending on the context, independent variables are also known as predictor variables, regressors, controlled variables, manipulated variables, explanatory variables, or input variables. The dependent variable is also known as the response variable, the regressand, the measured variable, the responding variable, the explained variable, the outcome variable, the experimental variable or the output variable. This answer was coppied onto this page by tom hills of falmouth waii
It depends on the relationship, if any, between the independent and dependent variables.
dependent = y values, independent = x values
dependent variable is current and independent variable is resisitance
Independent variables can take values within a given boundary. The dependent variable will take values based on the independent variable and a given relationship at which the former can take its values.
Depends on the experiment - there may be no relationship. Typically proportional, inversly proportional, proportional to the log and similar are given in set experiments at schools. So a staight line going up and straingt line going down or a curve of some sort when drawn as a line graph.
Independent and dependent are types of variables. These variables are used mostly in science and math. When using independent variables you can control them dependent variables you cannot.
Independent variables can take values within a given boundary. The dependent variable will take values based on the independent variable and a given relationship at which the former can take its values.
control
the independent variable controls the dependent variables
the dependent variable has one value and the independent variable has no value