This is generally true. The allowable ranges vary from cell type to cell type, but extremes of temperature and pH will generally kill living cells.
only in a narrow range of temperature and pH.
Temperature
Homeostasis is important because the cells in all living organisms only function properly within a very narrow range of conditions. If this optimum range is not maintained these cells cease to function as they need to.
no
An animal that maintains its body temperature within a narrow range even when the environmental temperature varies is a warm-blooded animal.
The AVERAGE function.
The AVERAGE function.
SUM
SUM function
Homeotherms.
You use the COUNT function. Say your range was the cells for A2 to A20. In another cell you would enter the following function:=COUNT(A2:A20)You use the COUNT function. Say your range was the cells for A2 to A20. In another cell you would enter the following function:=COUNT(A2:A20)You use the COUNT function. Say your range was the cells for A2 to A20. In another cell you would enter the following function:=COUNT(A2:A20)You use the COUNT function. Say your range was the cells for A2 to A20. In another cell you would enter the following function:=COUNT(A2:A20)You use the COUNT function. Say your range was the cells for A2 to A20. In another cell you would enter the following function:=COUNT(A2:A20)You use the COUNT function. Say your range was the cells for A2 to A20. In another cell you would enter the following function:=COUNT(A2:A20)You use the COUNT function. Say your range was the cells for A2 to A20. In another cell you would enter the following function:=COUNT(A2:A20)You use the COUNT function. Say your range was the cells for A2 to A20. In another cell you would enter the following function:=COUNT(A2:A20)You use the COUNT function. Say your range was the cells for A2 to A20. In another cell you would enter the following function:=COUNT(A2:A20)You use the COUNT function. Say your range was the cells for A2 to A20. In another cell you would enter the following function:=COUNT(A2:A20)You use the COUNT function. Say your range was the cells for A2 to A20. In another cell you would enter the following function:=COUNT(A2:A20)
To be technically accurate, no function does this. The answer you are looking for is the AVERAGE function. It divides by the amount of cells that have values in them, not by the amount of cells. In most situations, all of the selected cells have values in them, but there are cases when they don't.