Manuals/calci/VARP

VARP()


  • Parameters are set of numbers.
    • VARP(),calculates variance based on the entire population.


Description

  • This function gives the variance based on the entire population.
  • Variance is a measure of dispersion obtained by taking the mean of the squared deviations of the observed values from their mean in a frequency distribution.
  • i.e.,variance is a measure of how far each value in the data set is from the mean.
  • It is denoted by  . The square root of variance is called the standard deviation.
  • In  , Parameters are numbers based on a population. Here First Parameter is required. From the second parameter are optional.
  • To find the variance we can use the following formula:

  where   is the sample mean of   and   is the sample size.

  • Suppose   which is indicating all the values are identical.
  • When   is non-zero then it is always positive.
  • This function is considering our given data is the entire population.
  • Suppose it should consider the data as the sample of the population, we can use the VAR function.
  • The arguments can be either numbers or names, array,constants or references that contain numbers.
  • Suppose the array contains text,logical values or empty cells, like that values are not considered.
  • When we are entering logical values and text representations of numbers as directly, then the arguments are counted.
  • Suppose the function have to consider the logical values and text representations of numbers in a reference , we can use the VARPA function.
  • This function will return the result as error when
      1. Any one of the argument is non-numeric. 
      2. The arguments containing the error values or text that cannot be translated in to numbers.


Examples

Spreadsheet
A B C D E F
1 40 45 60 24 72 81
2 10.21 11.65 17.81 15.02 18.18 27.41
  1. =VARP(A1:F1) = 377.555555556
  2. =VARP(A1:F2) = 31.4284222222
  3. =VARP(30,32,37,41,TRUE) = 199.76
  4. =VARP(40,61,53,46,FALSE) = 449.2

Related Videos

Sample Variance

See Also

References