week frequency cumulative frequency123
Given a frequency table,the first cumulative frequency is the same as the first frequency;the second cumulative frequency is the sum of the first cumulative frequency and the second [ordinary] frequency;the third cumulative frequency is the sum of the second cumulative frequency and the third [ordinary] frequency;and so on.An alternative definition is that the cumulative frequency for any value is the sum of all the frequencies less than or equal to that value.
by counting the amount of numbers and puting them in a tally.
you get a range and put all the numbers in their correct range and those together
make the intervals really small.
Yes, you can.
yes but you need the exact numbers from the intervals in the table to make a stem and leaf plot.
The question asks about the "this frequency table". In those circumstances would it be too much to expect that you make sure that there is a frequency table in the question?
week frequency cumulative frequency123
Given a frequency table,the first cumulative frequency is the same as the first frequency;the second cumulative frequency is the sum of the first cumulative frequency and the second [ordinary] frequency;the third cumulative frequency is the sum of the second cumulative frequency and the third [ordinary] frequency;and so on.An alternative definition is that the cumulative frequency for any value is the sum of all the frequencies less than or equal to that value.
A "frequency table" just refers to a kind of table you can make to record the frequency of particular results or events, as part of an experiment or to analyse data. It is convenient to list the possible events or results along the left side of the table, and then make tally marks across from them, in order to count the number of times each one appears; thus, the tally marks represent each event or result's frequency, or the number of times it shows up.
by counting the amount of numbers and puting them in a tally.
you get a range and put all the numbers in their correct range and those together
You cannot have a table without columns. Columns are what make up the structure of a table. It would be like a house without walls.
Any intervals which are convenient to construct and also make some logical sense.
Answer: 1000 Megahertz or 1 Gigahertz. Seconds are one of many ways to measure time intervals; Frequency is the repetition of (other) intervals per unit time. As Frequency is the reciprocal of Time, so Hertz is the Reciprocal of Seconds. t = 1 / f, f = 1 / t, Hertz = 1 / Seconds, Seconds = 1 / Hertz A period of 1 nanosecond, 1 / 1,000,000,000 second, corresponds to a frequency of 1,000,000,000 Hertz.
Elements are what make up the Periodic Table; they also cannot be broken down into smaller substances.