If a sample of 82 employees were taken from a population of 510 employees, could refer to the variance of how many of the employees' salaries? A. 82 B. 510 C. Neither 82 nor 510 D. Both 82 and 510
inbetween the employees and could theres a s^2
i know that the x with the line above is the 82 and another sign that i dont know how to describe refers to the 510 but idk what this one referees too.
this one is very similar to the one you did with the runners
Well with the runners one it was 201.. for this case it would be 510.. But does it have a part in both the 82 and 510?
lol idk I'm just pointing out something I noticed I don't know how to solve this :( sorry
@dtan5457 can you help?
maybe he can help us. ^.^
ok :p :)
@Nnesha @pooja195
good smart ppl to tag *clapping emoji* :)
can you help??
im a bit confused on this @sleepyjess do you know?
@triciaal can you help?
@Nnesha where ru!!!!
@Directrix
haha the struggle xD
yea haha i just want to figure this question out
ok now everyone is here xD prepare to receive a million replies xD
i don't even get the question? please make sure you write the question neatly!!!
i wrote it how i got it
If a sample of 82 employees were taken from a population of 510 employees, s^2 could refer to the variance of how many of the employees' salaries?
sorry if that came off a little rude. i wasn't trying to make it sound like that
I think it would be 82, the sample size
if you don't mind me asking why do you think it's 82?
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