Rate of change of the "vertical" variable in relation to the "horizontal" variable.
What do you mean? As in if you connect two points that make a horizontal line? Are you trying to figure out the Slope? The slope of a horizontal line is 0. And the slope of a vertical line is undifined. If that's what you were asking. Or if you were asking plainly what it is when that happens, it's just a horizontal line.
You can draw a line graph if you have-- the slope of the line and one point on the lineOR-- two points on the line
It is a description of the Slope of the line with respect to the two variables you are plotting. In Statistics, you may be plotting AGE versus Car Mileage and a line drawn through the data is the Trend Line.
it means what you see the most on the graph
It tells you the relationship between the X value and the Y value is constant.
"Slope" is the steepness of the line on any graph.
it is impossible to tell the slope of a line graph without proper points to evaluate from.
The graph of the equationy = 2x + any numberis a straight line with a slope of 2.
The slope of each point on the line on the graph is the rate of change at that point. If the graph is a straight line, then its slope is constant. If the graph is a curved line, then its slope changes.
the slope.
acceleration
A line. The derivative of a function is its slope. If the slope is a constant then the graph is a line.
A straight line graph with negative slope slants downward from left to right.
If velocity is constant, the slope of the graph on a position vs. time graph will be a straight line. The slope of this line will represent the constant velocity of the object.
Acceleration can be obtained from a velocity line graph by calculating the slope of the line at a particular point. The slope of the line represents the rate of change of velocity, which is the acceleration. The steeper the slope, the greater the acceleration.
The line on the graph that shows what the data is saying.
It will be a horizontal line