Not all statisticians would agree that the statement is true.
False. When the range is large you would use a grouped frequency distribution.
Real Class Limits are the class intervals of a frequency distribution when stated as in continuous categories. ie. 18.5-19.5, 20.7-34.7 Stated Class Limits are the class intervals of a frequency distribution when stated as discrete categories. ie. 19-21, 23-25
It is derived frequency distribution. XD
A frequency distribution lists each value in the distribution and the number times it appears, while a relative frequency distribution reports the proportion of cases reporting each value
Cumulative Frequency is The total of a frequency and all frequencies so far in a frequency distribution. It is the 'running total' of frequencies in the frequency distribution table.
The frequency distribution shows in a graph or a table all the possible values of a variable, called the random variable, and the frequency or the count of each value. For example, if you had the ages of 100 people you could do a frequency distribution and split the ages into 10 year categories and then show how many of the 100 people were in the 20s, how many in their 30s, how many in their 40s and so on.
What are the disadvantages of frequency distribution tables
frequency distribution contain qualitative data
A regular fequency table reports the exact frequency for each category on the scale of measurement. However, when the categories are grouped together into class intervals, the table only reports only overall frequency for the interval but will not show how many scores are in each of the individual categories.
A regular fequency table reports the exact frequency for each category on the scale of measurement. However, when the categories are grouped together into class intervals, the table only reports only overall frequency for the interval but will not show how many scores are in each of the individual categories.
in form of percent