Yes, a variable is a placeholder in programming or mathematics that can represent different values. It allows for flexibility and enables the use of different data in calculations or operations.
In an experiment, your control variable will not be caused to vary by the experiment. Think of 'cause and effect'. The independent variable is the cause, the result is the effect, and the dependent variable is the one that you leave to be changed by the experiment.
The control group stays the same. Your variables will Vary (makes sense). You set up an experiment with independent variables which is the thing that you are changing to see the effect of it on something else. The thing that you are measuring the effect of is the dependent variable, because it depends on the independent variable. You always have a control group. The control is a group that you do nothing to so that you can see if your results are because of the change in the independent variable or if the results just happen by chance or for some other reason.
The control variable, also known as the constant variable, does not vary in an experiment. It is kept constant to ensure that any changes observed are the result of the independent variable being tested.
The independent variable is the one which the experimenter chooses to not vary in the course of the study. Time is merely one parameter among many that could be chosen. For example, sunshine as a function of latitude would have latitude as the independent variable, for it is the sunshine that will vary according to latitude. One would have difficulty in suggesting that latitude would vary as a function of sunshine.
the dependent variable cant change the independent varible, but the independent variable can change the dependent varible. (eg: Bob wants to see if the new Baseball pitching machine throws better fastballs then his friend. The baseball pitching machine(independent) could change a fastball(dependent), but a fastball(dependent) cant change the baseball pitching machine(independent).
A variable is a part of something or an equation that is able to vary or change.
independent variable
a variable
You're a variable.
variable
The prefix for "vary" is "un-" (as in "unvarying") and the suffix is "-able" (as in "variable").
A variable.
Variable means subject to change, able to vary or differ. Example : "In summer, the mountain weather was always variable." In algebra, a variable is a symbol, usually a letter, that represents one or more unknown or changing number. Example : "The variable is found using the proper equation."
Independent variable is what you, the experimenter, change or enacts in order to do your experiment
factors in an experiment that are kept the same and not allowed to change or vary.
There are a number of costs that vary or change, but if the variation is not due to volume changes, it is not considered to be a variable cost.
An independent variable is the variable which you change in an experiment. you can only have 1 variable that can change in an experiment and more than one independent variable will result in an unfair experiment