Hi @asiffaisal804, The data used here are frequency of heights of males and females, and suitable as a histogram. I have grouped the heights into categories of 4cm. There's no problem calling it a "bar diagram". Dr E.
I'm currently self teaching myself r studio before my university course starts and these videos are genuinely the clearest videos on the internet for explaining r studios in a simple and easy to understand manner!!!
Thank you so much. I’m currently learning R for the first time and came across your videos and you make it so easy to understand. You are truly doing the lords work
thanks Sir for explaining the topic in such a good manner 👍👍......it is in my MBA syllabus and I am thinking of learning in advance about this topic and after watching your video I can surely say I learned about the Mann Whitney U Test and it will be very helpful for me now to understand when college starts explaining about this topic
When making a and changing to logarithmic on both the X and Y axis, why do the Y axis numbers move to the center of the chart rather than stay on the left side of the chart?
hello, i have a question! what if the variables in my dataset have different length (instead of type A-F all have 16 data, mine has lets say A 17 but B13...) how can i print out the dataset like yours to further assess noarmality?
Thank you! It was hard to find an explanation where we want to calculate a specific percentage of a cell. Your video should be number one on the list of searches!