Yes. (Although it is normally recorded in a discrete form.)
Height, weight, wavelength of light.
No. Because blood pressure is continuous variable. Like temperature, a person's weight and height, the measured value occurs over a continuous scale.
It is a continuous variable.
Continuous variables have an unlimited number of possibilities between two points. In the scientific realm, age is a continuous variable.
No, it is a continuous variable.
It is a continuous variable.
A quantitative variable where there is a continuous (no infinite number) of attributes. For example length/height/weight can be measure as continuous as it has not set number
Height, weight, wavelength of light.
No. Because blood pressure is continuous variable. Like temperature, a person's weight and height, the measured value occurs over a continuous scale.
It can be. For example, height is a continuous variable. If you wanted to show what proportion of the children in your school were in various bands of height, you could use a pie chart.
To determine whether the independent variable is continuous or categorical, you need to consider its nature. A continuous variable can take on an infinite number of values within a given range, such as height or temperature. In contrast, a categorical variable consists of distinct categories or groups, such as gender or type of cuisine. The classification depends on how the variable is measured and the context of the study.
It is a continuous variable.
It is a continuous variable.
Yes. It is a continuous variable. As used in probability theory, it is an example of a continuous random variable.
No, Patient's gender is not a continuous variable. It is discrete variable.
No, it is a continuous process but not a continuous variable. The magnitude of star-shine, across all stars is a continuous variable. The magnitude of a star's shine over time is a continuous variable.
Not continuous => Discrete variable. Continuous => Continuous variable.