There are 5 (not 4) parts of an elementary box and whiskers plot.
From left to right, they are:
minimum,
lower quartile,
median,
upper quartile, and
maximum.
A more advanced version of plot is used for data containing outliers. In such cases the whiskers extend to the minimum or maximum EXCLUDING the outlier(s) and the outliers themselves are marked with Xs - beyond the scope of the whiskers.
the example for the box and whisker plot is THESE NUTSS
maximum value
A box and whisker plot is a sort of graph used to show a period of time such as a time line or a line graph. To really found out what a box and whisker plot is you should ask a teacher
Nobody likes cats
It's actually called a box and whisker, and it is useful for numbers.
A box and whisker plot has four quartiles in which its data is spread across.
the example for the box and whisker plot is THESE NUTSS
maximum value
A data display that organizes data values into four parts using the lower extreme,lower quartile,median,upper quartile,and upper extreme.
A box and whisker plot is a sort of graph used to show a period of time such as a time line or a line graph. To really found out what a box and whisker plot is you should ask a teacher
how about you tell me what a misleading box and whisker plot is first and then ill answer ur question ;)
Nobody likes cats
It's actually called a box and whisker, and it is useful for numbers.
Oh, dude, finding the mean, median, mode, and range on a box and whisker plot is like trying to make a sandwich with a hammer. The box and whisker plot already shows you the median (that's the line in the box) and the range (from whisker to whisker). The mean and mode aren't typically shown on a box plot because they're off doing their own thing, not invited to the box and whisker party.
You cannot. The mode is not part of a box and whisker plot.
On a standard box-and-whisker plot, the averages used are medians. Arithmetic means are used in some box-and-whisker plots, but most use medians.
The lower quartile is the line that represents the left-hand edge of the "box", in the box and whisker plot.