Answer:
28.4 miles/gallon
Step-by-step explanation:
to find the answer, you need to find the constant by dividing the miles drove by the amount of gasoline (or the other way around in terms of wording if it is not correct grammar) So you need to do 35.5/1.25 . FYI I converted the fraction to decimal. The answer is 28.4 miles/gallon.
Hope this helped!! :)
Consider the following sets of sample data: A: $29,400, $30,900, $21,000, $33,200, $21,300, $24,600, $29,500, $22,500, $35,200,
Lana71 [14]
Answer:
CV for A = 21.8%
CV for B = 15.5%
Step-by-step explanation:
The formula for coefficient of variation is:
CV = Standard Deviation / Mean
So,
For A:
Mean = Sum/No. of items
= 391300/14
=$27950
and
SD = $6085.31
CV for A = 6085.31/27950 * 100
=21.77%
Rounding off to one decimal
CV for A = 21.8%
For B:
Mean = Sum/No. of items
= 43.58/11
=3.96
and
SD = 0.615
CV for B = 0.615/3.96 * 100
=15.53%
=15.5% ..