its the X times the Y axis
Try to think of it as a half a Square.
If the graph has multiple steps you just treat each step as half a rectangle then add all the half rectangles together then divide how many steps there are
better graph would be a line graph
none use a calculater
when you can't find any other peice of graph paper
To show continual change from month to month, it would probably be better to use a line graph.
which ever bar or table that is the most on a table or bar graph... : ) EX: 10 Is the most on the table , 20 is the highest thing on the bar graph
The answer depends on what variables the graph shows.
To find the average speed from a velocity-time graph, calculate the total distance traveled and divide it by the total time taken. This will give you the average speed. Alternatively, you can find the slope of the secant line that connects the initial and final points on the graph to determine the average speed.
You find the average rate of change of the function. That gives you the derivative on different points of the graph.
Assuming it's a graph of speed vs time, then between 2 times, the average is the distance (= area under the graph between those times) divided by the time difference.
To find the average speed or rate of something.(:
You find the equation of a graph by finding an equation with a graph.
-- Pick two points on the graph. -- Find the difference in time between the two points. -- Find the difference in displacement between the same two points. -- (Difference in displacement) divided by (difference in time) is the average Speed . You can't tell anything about velocity from the graph except its magnitude, because the graph displays no information regarding the direction of motion.
Find directed graph that has the adjacency matrix Find directed graph that has the adjacency matrix
go to weather.com it tells you weathers then you choose graphs
line graph
better graph would be a line graph
To determine the speed of an object from a graph, you can calculate the average speed by finding the slope of the line connecting two points on the graph. The steeper the slope, the higher the speed. Alternatively, you can also find the instantaneous speed by looking at the slope of the tangent line at a specific point on the graph.