Asked by tt
Which is part of a proper graph?
a table of data
at least one independent variable
consistent intervals on each axis
intervals of five units on each axis
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
"Consistent intervals on each axis."
Explanation: a proper graph needs evenly spaced (consistent) scales on its axes so distances correctly represent differences in values. A table of data is not part of the graph itself (it's a separate representation). You do not always need exactly five-unit intervals—just a consistent scale. And while many graphs plot an independent and dependent variable, "at least one independent variable" is not a universal requirement for every graph type.
Explanation: a proper graph needs evenly spaced (consistent) scales on its axes so distances correctly represent differences in values. A table of data is not part of the graph itself (it's a separate representation). You do not always need exactly five-unit intervals—just a consistent scale. And while many graphs plot an independent and dependent variable, "at least one independent variable" is not a universal requirement for every graph type.
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