I have John vs. Bob exceeding in school. I am trying to do a bell curve
where John beat Bob at turning in homework at 77% within the month or 35 out
of 46. And another time at 30% or 14/46, etc. How do I graph starting with
this. Can someone help.
Thanks.
In article <2CA160B9-F633-48E6-9189-E5A232843D13@microsoft.com>,
Barbara@discussions.microsoft.com says...
> I have John vs. Bob exceeding in school. I am trying to do a bell curve
> where John beat Bob at turning in homework at 77% within the month or 35 out
> of 46. And another time at 30% or 14/46, etc. How do I graph starting with
> this. Can someone help.
>
> Thanks.
>
What does that mean? And, how is someone doing better than someone else x%
of the time related to a normal distribution?
--
Regards,
Tushar Mehta
www.tushar-mehta.com
Excel, PowerPoint, and VBA add-ins, tutorials
Custom MS Office productivity solutions
Actually, I want to graph a normal distribution like this, that was just an
example.
74% = 34/46 times
30% = 14/46 times
44% = 20/26 times
26% = 12/46 times
"Tushar Mehta" wrote:
> In article <2CA160B9-F633-48E6-9189-E5A232843D13@microsoft.com>,
> Barbara@discussions.microsoft.com says...
> > I have John vs. Bob exceeding in school. I am trying to do a bell curve
> > where John beat Bob at turning in homework at 77% within the month or 35 out
> > of 46. And another time at 30% or 14/46, etc. How do I graph starting with
> > this. Can someone help.
> >
> > Thanks.
> >
> What does that mean? And, how is someone doing better than someone else x%
> of the time related to a normal distribution?
>
> --
> Regards,
>
> Tushar Mehta
> www.tushar-mehta.com
> Excel, PowerPoint, and VBA add-ins, tutorials
> Custom MS Office productivity solutions
>
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