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Discrete data and Continuous data-MCQ & Theory (PC-2)

Discrete data and Continuous data-MCQ & Theory (PC-2)

What is the difference between discrete data and continuous data?

Discrete data can only take particular values. There may potentially be an infinite number of those values, but each is distinct and there's no grey area in between. Discrete data can be numeric -- like numbers of apples -- but it can also be categorical -- like red or blue, or male or female, or good or bad.

Continuous data are not restricted to defined separate values, but can occupy any value over a continuous range. Between any two continuous data values, there may be an infinite number of others. Continuous data are always essentially numeric.

It sometimes makes sense to treat discrete data as continuous and the other way around:

  • For example, something like height is continuous, but often we don't really care too much about tiny differences and instead group heights into a number of discrete bins -- i.e. only measuring centimetres --.

  • Conversely, if we're counting large amounts of some discrete entity
    -- i.e. grains of rice, or termites, or pennies in the economy -- we may choose not to think of 2,000,006 and 2,000,008 as crucially
    different values but instead as nearby points on an approximate
    continuum.


Let us have a little online practise 



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