A Venn Diagram seems to be your best bet.
A diagram can be found in the related links.
when a sets of data can be separated by 2 orders of variables, which are the independent & dependent variables.
2 x 2 x 2 x 3 = 24
Phase diagrams typically show the boundaries between the different phases based on 2 or more variables. For 2 factor diagrams the variables may be temperature & pressure, volume & pressure (often with isotherms superimposed), temperature & composition, or (in the case of a 3 dimensional diagram, temperature, pressure & volume (where instead of isotherm lines, temperature becomes a variable on one of the 3 axes). The choice of variables depends on what you need to compare.
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When the data on the graph is continuous,it does make sense to connect the points on the graph of 2 related variables.
A Venn diagram is a diagram that shows relationships between 2 things or concepts using circles if there are similarities between both then you overlap the circles.
A direct correlation, it appears as a straight line on a graph and occurs when variables are related as y=xk.
A diagram is not needed because 2 is a prime number whose only factors are itself and one which makes it a prime number in common with all other prime numbers.
1. Draw a free-body diagram if applicable. 2. Identify what variables are known and what variables are sought. 3. Identify equations that relate the variables. 4. Do computations. 5. Do a reasonableness check: is the answer reasonable? If not, try solving the problem a different way to see if you get the same solution.
It is oxygen group elements
Algebraic expressions may contain variables but they are not normally called variables. In fact, if they are related to identities, they need not be variable. For example, (4x2 + 8xy + 4y2)/(x + y)2 is an algebraic expression, but it is not a variable: it equals 4.