To calculate the average deviation from the average value, you first find the average of the values. Then, subtract the average value from each individual value, take the absolute value of the result, and find the average of these absolute differences. This average is the average deviation from the average value.
With a formula, you know the variable's value, and you have to calculate the value of the function of it. With an equation, you know the function's value, and you have to calculate the value of the variable.
With a formula, you know the variable's value, and you have to calculate the value of the function of it. With an equation, you know the function's value, and you have to calculate the value of the variable.
The FV() function.
The Average function. For example, to get the mean of the cells from A2 to A15, you would use it this way: =AVERAGE(A2:A15)
The FV function.
To evaluate a function means to replace the variable with some value, and calculate the value of the function. For example, in the parabola y = x2 (or, using functional notation, f(x) = x2), if you replace x with 10, and calculate x2, you are evaluating the function for that specific value.
true
(sum of data)/number of data
No. The MIN function displays the lowest value in a range. The AVERAGE function gets the arithmetic mean of a set of values. It totals them up and divides by the amount of numbers.
Using its Taylor-series.
use the rate function