1, 2, 3.
we use sem and leaf plot in data sorting when there are lare amounts of numbers to anyalyze.
Yes you can. If, for example, you have data ranging from 65 to 115, you may wish to use 6, 7, 8, 9, 10 and 11 as the stems.
A Box and Whisker Plot.
You would use lower for degrees. :)
I would hope all elections use rational numbers: all Counting numbers are Rational numbers.
the numbers branches, stems, petals coincide with the Fibonacci sequence.
we use sem and leaf plot in data sorting when there are lare amounts of numbers to anyalyze.
the plot was developed by a committee of writers.
you would use a box plot when you say "I got the moves like jaggar" i got the moves like jaggar
A line plot is a graph used to show frequency of data along a number line. You should use a line plot with less than 25 numbers to compare.
use a bar graph
Any time
Yes you can. If, for example, you have data ranging from 65 to 115, you may wish to use 6, 7, 8, 9, 10 and 11 as the stems.
A Box and Whisker Plot.
The most commonly eaten would be asparagus, celery, and rhubarb.
You would use lower for degrees. :)
Look at the numbers you're going to be placing on the graph. Obviously you wouldn't have the graph going up by ones if you have to plot 100, 125, 150, 175, etc. Order the numbers that're going to be graphed in order from least to greatest. For example: Let's say our numbers are 10, 19, 35, 52, and 78. We can't do ones, as the graph would be to small, we can't do fifty's as the graph would be to big. We could go fives or tens. That would be more appropriate. The appropriate scale to use is always dependant on the numbers you have to plot or graph. If we graph in the thousands we can just use ones and on the "Y" axis denote that all plotted numbers are in thousands.