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how would you find the interval in a line graph?

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Interval is the area it occupies... for instance (1,7) means that line only exists from x=1 all the way to x=7. So if you have a snake. Origin is (0,0), and the snake is 6 feet long. It only takes up the space (all the way straight) of 6 feet. So from (1,7) that snake is seen, but before 1 and after 7 it isn't. On the x-axis. If you still don't understand let me know haha

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o.0 what? lol i asked how to find it now what it is
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Oh...my bad...the area where it exists is how you find it though! Like if your line starts at -3, and ends at 8...then your interval would be [-3,8] get it? It's just the x-values of each end of the graph
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See the illustration at: http://mste.illinois.edu/courses/ci330ms/youtsey/lineinfo.html
I hope it helps!

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