The lower quartile is the line that represents the left-hand edge of the "box", in the box and whisker plot.
There can be no sensible box-and-whiskers plot for just one number - no matter how large it is.There can be no sensible box-and-whiskers plot for just one number - no matter how large it is.There can be no sensible box-and-whiskers plot for just one number - no matter how large it is.There can be no sensible box-and-whiskers plot for just one number - no matter how large it is.
how about you tell me what a misleading box and whisker plot is first and then ill answer ur question ;)
true
stuff
A Box and Whisker Plot.
To give a simple summary of quantitative data with 5 or more observations.
you could use almost any kind of graph if you label it. But i would stay away from pie graphs. I would use a box and whisker plot.
A box plot may be used at a preliminary stage to determine the centre and spread of a set of data. The box [and whiskers] plot measures the central point by the median and the range from the maximum and minimum or the quartile points.
On a standard box-and-whisker plot, the averages used are medians. Arithmetic means are used in some box-and-whisker plots, but most use medians.
False
false
Yes
the example for the box and whisker plot is THESE NUTSS
I would be tempted to use a box-plot or a scatter graph. Those are the first two that come to mind.
The box-and-whisker plot is simply a visual representation. It doesn't describe anything specific like height and weight. If you don't understand what a box-and-whisker plot is, you should be asking about what a box-and-whisker plot is. This is much like asking about what a pie chart is or a bar graph is... it's meaningless without context.
Box and whisker plot