Usually when you want different sections on the same page. One typical example is where you have different amounts of columns on the same page. For something like a newsletter you might have a single column for a title which will appear across several columns immediately below. Between the single column and the multiple columns a continuous section break would be put in.
When you want a new section, but on the same page. It is useful for things like having different amounts of columns in different parts of the same page. In a newspaper, a headline might spread across the whole page, while just under it would be a number of columns for stories. Between these you would put a continuous section break, to allow you have the two different amounts of columns.
If a graph has no breaks in it, it is continuous.
Continuous.
continuous
Yes, a corner is continuous, as long as you don't have to lift your pencil up then it is a continuous function. Continuous functions just have no breaks, gaps, or holes.
A continuous graph.
Continuity in a circuit means no breaks; continuous.
A continuous graph ?
Continuity in a circuit means no breaks; continuous.
A continuous section break begins a new section on the same page.
It is a continuous line graph.
Page Layout tab -> Page Setup section -> press arrow next to Breaks and will open Page Breaksand Section Breaks window.
Continuous means without interruption. For example, a continuous longitudinal study collects data from subjects over their full lifespan without breaks. Another example is a 'continuous line' is solid, while a 'dashed line' is a series of short lines.