Numerical data is numbers. Non-numerical data is anything else.
Quantitative data is measurable and numerical in nature. In contrast, qualitative data is any data that is not numerical and cannot be measured, only observed. Examples of quantitative data include age, height, year, and population. Examples of qualitative data include color, gender, country, and city.
Quantitative data is Information that can be expressed in numerical terms, counted, or compared on a scale. An example of a quantitative data is: 'the number of 911 calls received in a month'.
Yes, it is a Continuous variable measured along an equidistant scale.
Understanding and interpret numerical data
Numerical data is data measured or identified on a numerical scale. Numerical can be analyzed using statistical methods, and results can be displayed using tables, charts, histograms, and graphs.
numbers
The numerical scale on a map shows how many units of measurement taken from the scale represents the actual distance on the ground. If a and b are 2 miles apart on the ground, the a and b shown on the map should also represent 2 miles apart when measured on the numerical scale.
The Richter scale, which is used to measure the magnitude of earthquakes, is not measured in degrees. Instead, it assigns a numerical value to the amount of energy released by an earthquake.
The numerical scale on a map shows how many units of measurement taken from the scale represents the actual distance on the ground. If a and b are 2 miles apart on the ground, the a and b shown on the map should also represent 2 miles apart when measured on the numerical scale.
the relationship of distance measured on a map and the corresponding distance on the ground.
A Likert scale is considered a quantitative measurement tool because it assigns numerical values to responses and allows for numerical analysis of data.
Quantitative
Yes, grade level is categorical data because it represents distinct categories or groups such as first grade, second grade, etc. It cannot be measured on a numerical scale and has no inherent order.
I suspect that the answer is meant to be qualitative data but that is not a proper answer. Information about the qualitative aspect of data (eg what colour is you hair) is still a measurement. It may not be numerical measurement, but the question states "can't be measured", not "can't be measured numerically".
The numerical scale on a map shows how many units of measurement taken from the scale represents the actual distance on the ground. If a and b are 2 miles apart on the ground, the a and b shown on the map should also represent 2 miles apart when measured on the numerical scale.
Numerical data is numbers. Non-numerical data is anything else.