Class VIII Mathematics

Chapter 13: Introduction to Graphs

Standard NCERT & CBSE aligned study curriculum. Master concepts, track accuracy, revise weak areas, and challenge yourself with 9 customized practice modes.

Chapter Overview

Welcome to Class VIII Mathematics: Introduction to Graphs. This chapter forms a core structural component of the math syllabus, designed to build analytical rigor and key formula models.

Use the detailed subtopic guide below to review standard definitions, key mathematical rules, and study guidelines.

Prerequisite Concepts

Data HandlingSmart Charts Bar

Detailed Subtopics Study Guide

Review detailed conceptual explanations, mathematical equations, and guidelines for each subtopic in this chapter:

1Types of graphs (bar, pie, histogram, line)

Concept Explanation

Different ways of presenting data visually. Bar graphs compare categories. Histograms show continuous intervals. Pie charts show parts of a whole. Line graphs show trends over time.

Mathematical Representation
\text{Data Presentation} \in \{\text{Bar, Hist, Pie, Line, Scatter}\}
Study Guideline: Select the correct graph type based on whether the data is categorical, continuous, or time-series.

2Linear graphs coordinates

Concept Explanation

Plotting relationships between variables as a straight line on Cartesian axes, reading coordinates of points.

Mathematical Representation
y = mx + c
Study Guideline: A straight line shows that the dependent variable changes at a constant rate relative to the independent variable.

3Locating points (Cartesian system)

Concept Explanation

Identifying the ordered pair coordinates (x, y) of points marked on a Cartesian grid relative to the axes.

Mathematical Representation
P = (x, y)
Study Guideline: Read the x-coordinate along the horizontal axis, then read the y-coordinate along the vertical axis.

4Independent and Dependent variables applications

Concept Explanation

Understanding that the independent variable (x-axis) is manipulated, and the dependent variable (y-axis) is measured (e.g. quantity of petrol vs. total cost).

Mathematical Representation
y = f(x) \quad (x: \text{independent}, \, y: \text{dependent})
Study Guideline: Time and quantity are usually independent; costs and measurements are dependent.