Independent
Independent Variable c:
The indipendant variable
The responding variable is presented on the vertical axis.
a line graph
Generally speaking yes. It would be assumed when looking at a graph that the x axis is the variable you are able to change and so the y axis would be the result.
dependent variable always go on y.axis on the graph.
The dependent variable goes first.
In some cases it isn't always accurate.
An independant variable should always be on the x-axis of a graph and the dependant variable on the y-axis.
Never. You can use a column graph, or a scatter graph or even a superimposition of the two but there a column scatter graph does not exist.
Any 2-dimensional graph - column/bar, line, scattergram will do the trick. It is difficult, though not impossible, to show such a relationship with a series of pie charts.
The independent variable is always on the x-axis of a coordinate plane. The dependent variable is always on the y-axis. This is true because y always depends on x.
The x-axis of a graph is always your independent variable and the y-axis is the dependent variable. The independent variable is so called because it can stand alone as data and does not depend on other information to make sense.
x=3 means that the x variable always stays constant, so the y variable can change as much as it wants, but x will always be 3. on a graph, this would like a vertical line. (It should be perpendicular to the x variable's line...if that helps a visual:P)
Always when using a line graph use the x-axis for independent variable and the y-axis for dependent variable.
A bar graph is used to compare and contrast while the column graph is used to count things
On a line graph, where is the dependent variable placed?