Want this question answered?
No. The percentiles start at the lowest value. When the 1000 values are ordered, from smallest to largest, the 29th percentile will be the 290th value while the 30th percentile will be the 300th value.
If a set of data are ordered by size, then the lower quartile is a value such that a quarter of the data are smaller than it. The upper quartile is a value such that a quarter of the data are larger than it. Interquartile means between the quartiles.
20th percentile = 16th smallest value 60th percentile = 48th smallest value.
Multiply the nearest algorithm next to x by 100.
The range is the size of the set of data. Take the smallest from the largest value to get the range
It is 0.5
The answer is 47
No. The percentiles start at the lowest value. When the 1000 values are ordered, from smallest to largest, the 29th percentile will be the 290th value while the 30th percentile will be the 300th value.
If a set of data are ordered by size, then the lower quartile is a value such that a quarter of the data are smaller than it. The upper quartile is a value such that a quarter of the data are larger than it. Interquartile means between the quartiles.
The Median
20th percentile = 16th smallest value 60th percentile = 48th smallest value.
Multiply the nearest algorithm next to x by 100.
When the data set consistys of a single value.
The minimum data value in a data set is simply the lowest value of the set (easily found by arranging the set from lowest-highest values in an excel sheet or by hand).
The range is the size of the set of data. Take the smallest from the largest value to get the range
It doesn't. Percentiles are between 0% and 100%.
Range