Five equal classes and relative frequency











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Make the following numeric data into five equal classes and find the relative frequency of each one class



$4.4,8.1,15.3,23.4,5.5,7.2,1.3,7.3,18.1,4.8,6.1,12.3,16.3,8.4,24.0,3.9,15.4$



Any ideas how to approach this statistic math problem?










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    Make the following numeric data into five equal classes and find the relative frequency of each one class



    $4.4,8.1,15.3,23.4,5.5,7.2,1.3,7.3,18.1,4.8,6.1,12.3,16.3,8.4,24.0,3.9,15.4$



    Any ideas how to approach this statistic math problem?










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      Make the following numeric data into five equal classes and find the relative frequency of each one class



      $4.4,8.1,15.3,23.4,5.5,7.2,1.3,7.3,18.1,4.8,6.1,12.3,16.3,8.4,24.0,3.9,15.4$



      Any ideas how to approach this statistic math problem?










      share|cite|improve this question















      Make the following numeric data into five equal classes and find the relative frequency of each one class



      $4.4,8.1,15.3,23.4,5.5,7.2,1.3,7.3,18.1,4.8,6.1,12.3,16.3,8.4,24.0,3.9,15.4$



      Any ideas how to approach this statistic math problem?







      probability-theory statistics numerical-methods






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      edited Nov 18 at 13:31

























      asked Nov 18 at 9:58









      anton

      11




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          What you want to do is order from least to greatest. Then to find the class width you do $CW= frac{max - min}{5}$ (round). Then start at minimum value for your first class and add the class width.



          i.e
          $cw= 10
          \2-11
          \12-21$






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            up vote
            0
            down vote













            What you want to do is order from least to greatest. Then to find the class width you do $CW= frac{max - min}{5}$ (round). Then start at minimum value for your first class and add the class width.



            i.e
            $cw= 10
            \2-11
            \12-21$






            share|cite|improve this answer

























              up vote
              0
              down vote













              What you want to do is order from least to greatest. Then to find the class width you do $CW= frac{max - min}{5}$ (round). Then start at minimum value for your first class and add the class width.



              i.e
              $cw= 10
              \2-11
              \12-21$






              share|cite|improve this answer























                up vote
                0
                down vote










                up vote
                0
                down vote









                What you want to do is order from least to greatest. Then to find the class width you do $CW= frac{max - min}{5}$ (round). Then start at minimum value for your first class and add the class width.



                i.e
                $cw= 10
                \2-11
                \12-21$






                share|cite|improve this answer












                What you want to do is order from least to greatest. Then to find the class width you do $CW= frac{max - min}{5}$ (round). Then start at minimum value for your first class and add the class width.



                i.e
                $cw= 10
                \2-11
                \12-21$







                share|cite|improve this answer












                share|cite|improve this answer



                share|cite|improve this answer










                answered Nov 19 at 0:07









                pfmr1995

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