A title.
the scale would be how many units or numbers you go by each line in the line graph.
The time and the temperature
Usually a bar graph would be better in this situation. If the temperature is shown over time, a line graph would be better.
Sometimes it is, other times it is not. If you want to display the favourite fruit of a school class, a continuous line graph would be totally useless.
A bar graph would be used rather than a line graph to indicate different quantities or numbers of things that are distinct: such as the number of people of different ages in a group.A line graph is used to show a change in something, such as the growth of a person over some years.A line graph would also be more appropriate when showing a ratio.
It depends on the domain and codomain (range) of he data.
Bar graph.
the scale would be how many units or numbers you go by each line in the line graph.
Look at the numbers you're going to be placing on the graph. Obviously you wouldn't have the graph going up by ones if you have to plot 100, 125, 150, 175, etc. Order the numbers that're going to be graphed in order from least to greatest. For example: Let's say our numbers are 10, 19, 35, 52, and 78. We can't do ones, as the graph would be to small, we can't do fifty's as the graph would be to big. We could go fives or tens. That would be more appropriate. The appropriate scale to use is always dependant on the numbers you have to plot or graph. If we graph in the thousands we can just use ones and on the "Y" axis denote that all plotted numbers are in thousands.
Which of the following would be an appropriate scale of measurement for a small scale map showing a large region :
The time and the temperature
what incrament would ba a apppropriate to make a graph of the data
A pie chart or stacked bars.
Hourly temperature
The time and the temperature
line graph
line graph