Yes!
It's the number of favorable outcomes & the number of possible outcomes.
They are essential by definition. It is not possible to have a bar graph with no bars!
Odds ratio (AD/BC) is the ratio between number of times that something happens and does not happen. Crude odds ratio is the ratio that is not stratified (ex. by age). Adjusted odds ratio is a stratified odds ratio. If the odds ratio equals one, then there is no association, and null hypothesis shall be accepted. If one is included into confidence interval, then it is possible that odds ratio equals one, and it is not statistically significant. If stratified odds ratios are about the same, or there are no significant differences, the odds ratios are combined into one common odds summary estimate of two stratum specific ORs using Mantel-Haenszel and/or Cohran's tests, or multivariable analysis.
Three possible outcomes:WinLooseDraw
Yes it is possible.
When no possible relationship between the two variables in question is statistically significant.
Statistical significance means that you are sure that the statistic is reliable. It is very possible that whatever you conclusion or finding is, it may not be important or it not have any decision-making utility. For example, my diet program has a 1 oz weight loss per month and I can show that is statistically significant. Do you really want a diet like that? It is not practically significant
It is possible but not statistically likely that a fifth marriage will last.
Microsoft Word is not a spreadsheet application, but using tables it is possible to create some very simple spreadsheets. Due to its limitations, it is not really practical to use it as a spreadsheet for any significant work. Anyone that has Microsoft Word, would also have Excel and they would use that for their spreadsheets.Microsoft Word is not a spreadsheet application, but using tables it is possible to create some very simple spreadsheets. Due to its limitations, it is not really practical to use it as a spreadsheet for any significant work. Anyone that has Microsoft Word, would also have Excel and they would use that for their spreadsheets.Microsoft Word is not a spreadsheet application, but using tables it is possible to create some very simple spreadsheets. Due to its limitations, it is not really practical to use it as a spreadsheet for any significant work. Anyone that has Microsoft Word, would also have Excel and they would use that for their spreadsheets.Microsoft Word is not a spreadsheet application, but using tables it is possible to create some very simple spreadsheets. Due to its limitations, it is not really practical to use it as a spreadsheet for any significant work. Anyone that has Microsoft Word, would also have Excel and they would use that for their spreadsheets.Microsoft Word is not a spreadsheet application, but using tables it is possible to create some very simple spreadsheets. Due to its limitations, it is not really practical to use it as a spreadsheet for any significant work. Anyone that has Microsoft Word, would also have Excel and they would use that for their spreadsheets.Microsoft Word is not a spreadsheet application, but using tables it is possible to create some very simple spreadsheets. Due to its limitations, it is not really practical to use it as a spreadsheet for any significant work. Anyone that has Microsoft Word, would also have Excel and they would use that for their spreadsheets.Microsoft Word is not a spreadsheet application, but using tables it is possible to create some very simple spreadsheets. Due to its limitations, it is not really practical to use it as a spreadsheet for any significant work. Anyone that has Microsoft Word, would also have Excel and they would use that for their spreadsheets.Microsoft Word is not a spreadsheet application, but using tables it is possible to create some very simple spreadsheets. Due to its limitations, it is not really practical to use it as a spreadsheet for any significant work. Anyone that has Microsoft Word, would also have Excel and they would use that for their spreadsheets.Microsoft Word is not a spreadsheet application, but using tables it is possible to create some very simple spreadsheets. Due to its limitations, it is not really practical to use it as a spreadsheet for any significant work. Anyone that has Microsoft Word, would also have Excel and they would use that for their spreadsheets.Microsoft Word is not a spreadsheet application, but using tables it is possible to create some very simple spreadsheets. Due to its limitations, it is not really practical to use it as a spreadsheet for any significant work. Anyone that has Microsoft Word, would also have Excel and they would use that for their spreadsheets.Microsoft Word is not a spreadsheet application, but using tables it is possible to create some very simple spreadsheets. Due to its limitations, it is not really practical to use it as a spreadsheet for any significant work. Anyone that has Microsoft Word, would also have Excel and they would use that for their spreadsheets.
No, normally it occurs at temperatures of millions of degrees. It does occur at room temperature, but not in significant amount; any possible practical use of "cold fusion" is, so far, speculation.
I guess it would be possible, but not very practical.
Possible yes, practical/efficient no.
The answer is no. Although it could be possible, it is not practical.
Yes, it is possible, but, for more than tiny amounts of power, it is not practical.
to motivate
Anything is possible with enough time and modification, but the practical answer would be no.
A big one is an individual item of great importance, or of the greatest possible importance.