The mode, median, and range of a single data point such as 65 are all the data point itself, 65 in this instance.
The median of 65 and 90 is the same as their mean: 77.5The median of 65 and 90 is the same as their mean: 77.5The median of 65 and 90 is the same as their mean: 77.5The median of 65 and 90 is the same as their mean: 77.5
65 x 1.8 = 117
65/100 or 13/20
65%
The mode, median, and range of a single data point such as 65 are all the data point itself, 65 in this instance.
The lowest point spread of a super bowl was one point
The fudge recipe says to use margarine,not the spread kind. All stick margarine says 60-65% vegetable oil spread. Can you use the stick margarine with that label?
The median of 65 and 90 is the same as their mean: 77.5The median of 65 and 90 is the same as their mean: 77.5The median of 65 and 90 is the same as their mean: 77.5The median of 65 and 90 is the same as their mean: 77.5
The Cardinals did beat the point spread in the Super Bowl. The point spread was 6 and the Cardinals lost by 4 points.
In my area you can get Blue Bonnet 65% vegetable oil spread for about 65 cents at Winco.
65 x 1.8 = 117
The standard deviation is a measure of the spread of data about the mean. Although it is essentially a measure of the spread, the fact that it is the spread ABOUT THE MEAN that is being measured means that it does depend on the value of the mean. However, the SD is not affected by a translation of the data. What that means is that if I add any fixed number to each data point, the mean will increase by that number, but the SD will be unchanged.
the freezing point of wood is -65 C
65
Yes. Standard deviation depends entirely upon the distribution; it is a measure of how spread out it is (ie how far from the mean "on average" the data is): the larger it is the more spread out it is, the smaller the less spread out. If every data point was the mean, the standard deviation would be zero!
The boiling point of ethanoic acid (acetic acid) at 65 kPa is approximately 104 degrees Celsius.