The range. Highest value minus lowest value.
The range. Highest value minus lowest value.
An operator merges two different values and outputs a new expression based on the inputted values.
The two kinds of values are intrinsic values, which are values that are inherently important or worthwhile, and extrinsic values, which are values that are based on external factors such as rewards or approval from others.
Yes, two things that are the same are always equal.
This is not strictly true, because an absolute value, and hence the product of two absolute values can be zero. It is, therefore true to say that the product of two absolute values is always non-negative. An absolute value of a number is, by definition, non-negative. And by the definition of multiplication, the product of two non-negative numbers in non-negative.
No, the median is not always one of the data values. In a dataset with an odd number of values, the median is the middle number, which is a data value. However, in a dataset with an even number of values, the median is the average of the two middle numbers, which may not be a value in the dataset itself.
An absolute value doesn't have 2 answers. It isn't even a question. It's always positive.
Two variables related in such a way that their values always have a constant ratio directly vary.
In a two-tailed hypothesis test with a significance level of 0.01, the decision rule involves determining the critical values that correspond to the upper and lower 0.005 tails of the distribution. If the test statistic exceeds the critical value (or is less than the negative critical value), you would reject the null hypothesis. Without additional context on the distribution or the test statistic, it's not possible to specify the exact values, but generally, you would reject the null hypothesis if the test statistic is beyond these critical values.
There are several possibilities. They can be called arguments and there are two kinds, variables and constants. Variables can have different values and constants are always the same.
Not necessarily. Formula gives two values but they can be identical.
No. Not if there are an even number of observations and the middle two values are unequal.