The answer depends on whether or not age is expressed in whole years (discrete) or calculated from the date of birth (near continuous). It also depends on whether the number of observations is such that the data are presented as a grouped two-way table.
A continuous variable is one that can take any value within an interval (or a set of intervals). A discrete variable is one that can only take certain values.Some further notes:* Often a discrete variable takes integer values, but that is not necessary.* Neither discrete nor continuous variables need be limited to a finite number of possible values.* Frequently, continuous variables are continuous only in principle, and the measuring instruments or recording make them discrete. Eg your height is continuous but as soon as it is recorded as 1.75 cm or 5'9", it is made discrete.
Discrete as you cannot have half a purchase and do not need to use a measuring device.- Discrete : Information that is counted or measured in distinct separate units eg. kids in a family, books on a shelf- Continuous : Information measured along a continuous scale, requiring a measuring device eg. height, temperature, mass
You age, your height, your mass, the speed at which you run, the energy you burn in doing so. They may be measured as discrete quantities but the underlying variables are all continuous.
a piece of data that keeps changing like someones height or shoe size. * * * * * NO. Continuous data are those that can take all possible values within some given range (which may be infinite), or set of ranges. Discrete data, on the other hand, can only take values from a set (again, possibly infinite). These are usually integer values, but not necessarily so. Height is a continuous variable, but shoe size is a discrete variable.
Continuous variations have a wide range of possibilities. For example, your height is a continuous variation. There are many options (for example you could be 5'9, 4'6, 6'1) rather than an either/or situation. Discrete variations have only two possibilities. They can be thought of as "either/or" situations. For example, you can either roll your tongue or you can't. There is no grey area or in-between.
It is a continuous variable.
Yes. (Although it is normally recorded in a discrete form.)
A continuous variable is one that can take any value within an interval (or a set of intervals). A discrete variable is one that can only take certain values.Some further notes:* Often a discrete variable takes integer values, but that is not necessary.* Neither discrete nor continuous variables need be limited to a finite number of possible values.* Frequently, continuous variables are continuous only in principle, and the measuring instruments or recording make them discrete. Eg your height is continuous but as soon as it is recorded as 1.75 cm or 5'9", it is made discrete.
its continuous because if it was discrete i could measure it right now but its actually over time. For example: if my doctor wants to weigh me ,he will weigh me once and then weigh me again in like 1 week or so
Discrete as you cannot have half a purchase and do not need to use a measuring device.- Discrete : Information that is counted or measured in distinct separate units eg. kids in a family, books on a shelf- Continuous : Information measured along a continuous scale, requiring a measuring device eg. height, temperature, mass
You age, your height, your mass, the speed at which you run, the energy you burn in doing so. They may be measured as discrete quantities but the underlying variables are all continuous.
No. Because blood pressure is continuous variable. Like temperature, a person's weight and height, the measured value occurs over a continuous scale.
a piece of data that keeps changing like someones height or shoe size. * * * * * NO. Continuous data are those that can take all possible values within some given range (which may be infinite), or set of ranges. Discrete data, on the other hand, can only take values from a set (again, possibly infinite). These are usually integer values, but not necessarily so. Height is a continuous variable, but shoe size is a discrete variable.
Continuous variations have a wide range of possibilities. For example, your height is a continuous variation. There are many options (for example you could be 5'9, 4'6, 6'1) rather than an either/or situation. Discrete variations have only two possibilities. They can be thought of as "either/or" situations. For example, you can either roll your tongue or you can't. There is no grey area or in-between.
This difference is an example of continuous change versus discrete change. Continuous change happens gradually and progresses steadily over time, while discrete change occurs suddenly and marks a clear transition point. Height and weight changing gradually is continuous change, while getting a driver's license suddenly marking a new phase in life is discrete change.
A continuous number can take any value, such a 1.234, or 3.5, or 10.11. Height is usually a continuous quantity (even though height cannot be negative, it is still continous). Time is also usually considered continuous. Whereas a discrete number must take certain values, such as (1, 1/2, 3, 4, 5 etc. . for shoe sizes) or (1, 2, 3 etc.. for amount of people). Since you cannot get .2 of a person, or -3 pencils or something equally illogical .
There are 2 types of variation: Continuous and Discontinuous. Continuous: Has slight differences that grade into each other. Usually has quantitative/measurable characteristics. e.g Human height/weight... Discontinuous: It has discrete differences which have a clear cut- they do not merge into each other. e.g. human blood...