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Histogram: Revision history


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  • curprev 19:5019:50, 3 February 2024172.91.107.147 talk 25,563 bytes −329 As noted in a previous edit explanation, there aren't an official "seven tools of quality." So it's silly to put that in the main info box for the article. Also the main image is full of "chart junk," i.e., pointless visual complexity (it is rainbow colored for no apparent reason). The other histogram images in the article are much better, simpler, and more representative of typical histograms. undo

31 January 2024

  • curprev 02:3002:30, 31 January 2024Augmented Seventh talk contribs 25,892 bytes −56 repeated sentence undo Tags: Mobile edit Mobile web edit Advanced mobile edit
  • curprev 02:2402:24, 31 January 2024134.69.199.67 talk 25,948 bytes −458 Removed questionable statement from questionable source. There aren't really some official standard "7 basic tools of quality control." undo
  • curprev 02:2102:21, 31 January 2024134.69.199.67 talk 26,406 bytes −878 Unnecessary and potentially confusing to invoke the term "continuous." Therefore, I reverted the good faith edit, with a minor additional correction for clarity ("range of data" -> "range of values"). Also, removed potentially misleading statements regarding the exceptional case of unequal bin widths; there is no reason the labeling of the y-axis or the definition of the bin areas as proportional to frequency or not depends on whether bin widths are equal. undo Tag: references removed

29 January 2024

  • curprev 09:3509:35, 29 January 2024Evgeny talk contribs 27,284 bytes +40 Further clarify the difference between bar charts and histograms undo
  • curprev 05:3705:37, 29 January 2024172.91.107.147 talk 27,244 bytes −274 There's no particular reason a histogram can't be used to represent discrete (i.e., non-continuous) data. For example, you could have a histogram illustrating the number of pets that people own or the number of friends people have. Those aren't continuous variables because the values can only be whole numbers. The key distinction between histograms and bar graphs is that histograms typically represent quantitative variables. Quantitative variables aren't necessarily continuous. undo Tag: references removed

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