Well real life examples of a line graph can be the comparison of people in your city per day, or the amount of words you write in a different time. There are so many real life actions that can be put into a basic line graph to be compared. Or maybe how long it takes for you to type, that's another example.
a bar graph is best used for comparing amounts, a line graph best represents a steadily increasing value. For example prices of a shirt (line graph), or viscosity of liquids (bar graph).
A line graph would be what you plot for a function. for example, y = X2. Plotting this will result in a continuous line.A scatter graph will result from measuring a population or an experiment.For example, if you plotted the weight vs height for your class members, you would have a scatter graph.
Technically, neither are better. However, if you are measuring time (example: stocks for a certain company for six months) then a line graph would be better.
Scatter plots and Line graphs have similarities in that they both use an X-Y axis. But a line graph has a line or curve to describe a formula like Y=2X+5, a Scatter plot is a collection of X-Y coordinates that have no real formula due to real life uncertainties (Heisenberg), but, once plotted, can provide a clue to a single formula.
Well real life examples of a line graph can be the comparison of people in your city per day, or the amount of words you write in a different time. There are so many real life actions that can be put into a basic line graph to be compared. Or maybe how long it takes for you to type, that's another example.
There is a similar question which was answered as graph of real numbers. It could also be a graph of the line y=0, or a graph of the x-axis.
A rainbow.
A real life example of a line is a road. Other examples of lines include ball courts, driveways, roof tops, and buildings.
A real life example of a line is lines painted on the roadways. These lines divide traffic. Lines are also found on graphic prints and sport fields.
A real-life example of line symmetry is a butterfly. If you draw a line down the middle of a butterfly, the two sides mirror each other, creating symmetry.
The piece of lead in a pencil or the pencil.
a bar graph is best used for comparing amounts, a line graph best represents a steadily increasing value. For example prices of a shirt (line graph), or viscosity of liquids (bar graph).
Linear growth means that the graph is a straight line.
it would be 180 A perfectly straight line would be an example - like the edge of a ruler. Or a plumb line.
I suppose it could be both, but line graph makes much more sense.
A line graph would be what you plot for a function. for example, y = X2. Plotting this will result in a continuous line.A scatter graph will result from measuring a population or an experiment.For example, if you plotted the weight vs height for your class members, you would have a scatter graph.