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Please help! Sarah’s dogs:

Create frequency tables to represent the morning and afternoon dogs as two sets of data. Group the weights into classes that range 10 pounds. (Table is in second attachment)

Please help! Sarah’s dogs: Create frequency tables to represent the morning and afternoon-example-1
Please help! Sarah’s dogs: Create frequency tables to represent the morning and afternoon-example-1
Please help! Sarah’s dogs: Create frequency tables to represent the morning and afternoon-example-2
User Siran
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2 Answers

2 votes

Answer:

No hate but Facundo your answer is so complicated

Explanation:

what numbers does a,b,c represent and you have two tables but after abc I just don't understand can someone please help me?!? Thanks for answering it though.

User Steven Combs
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4.2k points
3 votes

Answer:

For Sarah's dogs, we have:

Morning:

39, 21, 12, 27, 23, 19, 19, 31, 36, 25

if the ranges are:

A) 10 pounds to 19 pounds: here we have the dog of 12, and two dogs of 19.

B) 20 to 29: one of 21 pounds, one of 27, one of 23 and one of 25, so here we have 4 dogs.

C) 30 to 39. here we have the left 3 dogs.

then the table is:


\left[\begin{array}{ccc}range&dogs\\10to19&3\\20to29&4\\30to39&3\end{array}\right]

For the afternoon, the weights of the dogs are:

15, 51, 8, 16, 43, 34, 27, 11, 8, 39

So the ranges:

0 to 9: here we have two dogs of 8.

10 to 19: 3 dogs, 15, 16 and 11.

20 to 29: 1 dog of 27

30 to 39: 2 dogs of 34 and 39

40 to 49: one dog of 43

50 to 59: one dog of 51.

the table is:


\left[\begin{array}{ccc}range&dogs\\0to9&2\\10to19&3\\20to29&1\\30to39&2\\40to49&1\\50to59&1\end{array}\right]

User Gene C
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