Home / Brinton, Willard C. Graphic Methods for Presenting Facts. New York: The Engineering Magazine Company, 1914. Internet Archive identifier: cu31924032626792 (Cornell University Library copy). The first American textbook on what we now call data visualization. / Passage

Graphic Methods for Presenting Facts

Brinton, Willard C. Graphic Methods for Presenting Facts. New York: The Engineering Magazine Company, 1914. Internet Archive identifier: cu31924032626792 (Cornell University Library copy). The first American textbook on what we now call data visualization. 302 words

Thus, in considering the weight, roughly 6 per cent of all the rails on the system are more than 75 pounds per yard, and using the right-hand scale it is seen that, roughly, 94 per cent of all the rails are "less than" 75 pounds per yard. There is not ordinarily any necessity for using a double scale in this manner. It is done here only to show the difference in reading a two-scale chart. In Fig. 152 and also in Fig. 153 the cumulative curves have been plotted on a different basis from that used in plotting Fig. 150 and Fig. 151. In Fig. 150 and Fig. 151, the curves begin at the 100 per cent line at the top of the chart and extend downward toward the right. In Fig. 152 and Fig. 153 the curves start at the zero line at the bottom and extend upwards toward the right of the chart. The differences in the shape of the curves will point out to a trained reader the manner in which he must read the curves. Fig. 152 and Fig. 153 should be read using the words "less than" instead of the words "more than". Thus,

Fig.

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Age

Data of Amy Hewes in Publications Am. Statistical Assn.

150. Percentage of 439 Married Graduates of Mount Holyoke College (Women) Graduating 1890 to 1909, who Married at Ages Greater than Any Specific Age Selected from the Horizontal Scale of the Chart

This is a cumulative frequency curve plotted from exactly the same data as Fig. 143. The word "over" with the arrow at the lower left-hand corner of the chart shows that the chart does not indicate the percentage who marry at any age but the number who marry later than any specific age read from the horizontal scale