![]() ![]() I do neither hate spreadsheets nor footnotes.Ĭoncerning footnotes I once created a few of them. And I didn't need to use a spreadsheet to get a wrong number of years.Ī mild objection concerning the position attributed to jkrideau. The most progressive contries North Korea and Cameroon on the other hand are the only ones who quitted membership already. The USA and the UK both joined the metre convention about 140 130 years ago. To give just one minor example: This forum might try a first step, e.g, omitting the bad date-time formats applied if a visitor not is logged in or a user not has selected better ones. To get people to actually use these optionns and to first deprecate and then omit the bad ones is a long-term task, and as so often education must be in the focus. We might better analyse where the huge mess came from and how there might first be established options to avoid the most relevant sources of errors. There must be other ways, and you know there are. For virtually identical reasons we would have to ban any usage of numbers in any media and in politic first of all. Sorry! I cannot align myself with this position seriously. (Editing: I remebered incorrectly as I meanwhile found out. Humanoids.png (6.55 KiB) Viewed 5651 timesīut the logical conclusion of your statements seems to be implicitly what RoryOF once stated explicitly (in a PM if I remember correctly - and with a blink): Completely forbid spreadsheet usage. Calc is just is not the proper tool for the job.Īttached is a quick and dirty histogram plot of age from your data created with the ggplot2 package in. Neither are wildly user-friendly but it looks to me that you probably need this level of stats and graphing. ![]() Personally I'd recommend R as it will do all the calculations, etc, needed for a weighted average or any other information you want on your data in one program If all you need is a statistical graphing package you might want to look at gnuplot. The premier general statistics and graphing package available at the moment is the Open Source R. Probably there is a way, I am sure I have seen it done with Excel and it should be possible but not fun in OpenOffice but it's not worth the trouble-use a decent stats package. Humanoid Population.ods Current stats(it will change every time you open it) (14.6 KiB) Downloaded 94 times I will keep looking for statistical graphing software but in the meantime, is there a way to do this in openoffice? Basically I want line + bar showing the distribution of muscularity and I think I want one separately for males and females so that I can see how they both correlate with attraction(linear, quadratic, exponential, etc.) So how can I do that?Īnd I want to graph it in such a way that the values on the horizontal are -3,-2,-1,0,1,2, and 3 and the vertical shows how often each one happens. I want it to tend towards the positives but still be random. It is tending towards the negatives with the random values. In some cases this means I have to add 1 to a particular value but this is rare.īut I have a problem here. I then have a weighted average taken in the next column to get overall muscularity(simple average isn't the best in this case) and then rounded to the nearest integer. ![]() I have age and muscularity of each muscle being random but the muscularity has a range of -3 to 3 and age has a range of 15 to 120. I have put in a spreadsheet 105 people's attributes(well part of them anyway). ![]()
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