you add the modes that you have found together and then divide that by two
If you're talking about measures of central tendency, if you have two modes put both of them down as the answer.
you add them then divide by 2
you add them together then add them by two
There are no modes.
Oh, dude, finding the right mode is like finding the right flavor of ice cream - you just gotta taste test them both! To find the mode in a set of data with 2 modes, you simply identify the values that appear most frequently. It's not rocket science, but hey, it's statistics - close enough, right?
you add the modes that you have found together and then divide that by two
You find the number in between the two modes. It could be a decimal.
There can be two modes in a data set. For example, in the data set {0,1,2,3,3,4,5,5,9}, there are two modes: 3 and 5.
The two modes are zoom mode and edit mode
Yes, a set of data can have two modes. It is called bimodal.
If you have 3 modes, write down the three as your answer. If the mode has two numbers, just write one of the numbers down.Repeat on the other two modes.
If you're talking about measures of central tendency, if you have two modes put both of them down as the answer.
there is two modes assult and barrage i rocomend assult
It means it has two modes.
Nothing. You simply have a distribution that is bimodal. You report both modes.
you add them then divide by 2