Yes it is because it is a measurement of something usually entering into decimal figures and cannot be simply counted.
Yes, it is a Continuous variable measured along an equidistant scale.
Non-continuous data is called discrete data.
interval data
In continuous grouped data the data is collected continuously and in groups. Data collected is in class intervals the actual data values are not visible.
No. It uses continuous data. * * * * * Not true. It can use either discrete or continuous data.
Yes, it is a Continuous variable measured along an equidistant scale.
interval
Non-continuous data is called discrete data.
Non-continuous data is called discrete data.
analog data are continuous and take continuous values
The weight of the motorcycles is discrete and not the continuous data.
interval data
In continuous grouped data the data is collected continuously and in groups. Data collected is in class intervals the actual data values are not visible.
No. It uses continuous data. * * * * * Not true. It can use either discrete or continuous data.
Data comes in various sizes and shapes. Two of them are Interval and Ratio. Interval is a measurement where the difference between two values is meaningful and follows a linear scale. For example: in physics, temperature 0.0 on either F or C does not mean 'no temperature'; in biology, a pH of 0.0 does not mean 'no acidity'. Interval data is continuous data where differences are interpretable, ordered, and constant scale, but there is no 'natural' zero. Ratio is the relation in degree or number between two similar things or a relationship between two quantities, ordered, constant scale, with natural zero. Ratio data is interpretable. Ratio data has a natural zero. A good example is birth weight in kg. The distinctions between interval and ratio data are slight. Certain specialized statistics, such as a geometric mean and a coefficient of variation can only be applied to ratio data.
when the data from a spreadsheet includes scratch on a continuous scale of binary
continuous data