Question 875387
<font color="blue">What is a bivariate data?</font>


Data that depends on two variables (example: amount in sales of ice cream depends on the temperature and the time of day). With bivariate data, you are often trying to find a link between them to see how they relate with one another.


<font color="blue">What is a univariate data?</font>


Data that depends on one variable (example: heights of individuals)



<font color="blue">What is a qualitative data?</font>


Data that cannot be computed numerically. For example, a categorical variable like color (red, green, blue, etc) is qualitative because you can't find the mean of the colors. It makes no sense to find the mean of red, green, blue.



<font color="blue">what is a quantitative data? </font>


Data that you can perform mathematical operations on and it makes sense to do so. Heights of individuals is a good example of quantitative (this is continuous data). Finding the mean height makes sense.