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Ohhhh, thanks for the help!!I think it would be useful to have a look at the definitions of categorical data and discrete data that are provided in your textbook:
Example 11a in the textbook is similar to this question, whereby report grades (for example, A, B, C) are similar to the scale of 1 to 5 stars in the sense that both an A grade and a 5-star rating can be treated as a category, such as "excellent". This would also explain the reason that the answer is B, i.e. this is about categories rather than counting/measuring.
- Categorical data are usually words and can be grouped into categories, such as a person's hair colour or cultural background.
- Discrete data are counted or measured and can only take on separate, distinct values, with 'gaps' or 'jumps', for example, the number of girls in a family is discrete because it could be 0, 1, 2, etc, but never 2.3 or View attachment 36105.
I hope this helps!![]()
Good question
thanks!!Good question
You may find the following post interesting.
https://stats.stackexchange.com/que...set-range-a-categorical-or-numerical-variable