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  • https://stats.libretexts.org/Courses/Cerritos_College/Introduction_to_Statistics_with_R/07%3A_Introduction_to_Probability/7.06%3A_Other_Useful_Distributions
    If you do this, you should see something similar to Figure ??. Your plot won’t look quite as pretty as the one in the figure, of course, because I’ve played around with all the formatting (see Chapter...If you do this, you should see something similar to Figure ??. Your plot won’t look quite as pretty as the one in the figure, of course, because I’ve played around with all the formatting (see Chapter 6), and I’ve also plotted the true distribution of the data as a solid black line (i.e., a normal distribution with mean 0 and standard deviation 1) so that you can compare the data that we just generated to the true distribution.
  • https://stats.libretexts.org/Workbench/Learning_Statistics_with_SPSS_-_A_Tutorial_for_Psychology_Students_and_Other_Beginners/06%3A_Introduction_to_Probability/6.06%3A_Other_Useful_Distributions
    If you do this, you should see something similar to Figure ??. Your plot won’t look quite as pretty as the one in the figure, of course, because I’ve played around with all the formatting (see Chapter...If you do this, you should see something similar to Figure ??. Your plot won’t look quite as pretty as the one in the figure, of course, because I’ve played around with all the formatting (see Chapter 6), and I’ve also plotted the true distribution of the data as a solid black line (i.e., a normal distribution with mean 0 and standard deviation 1) so that you can compare the data that we just generated to the true distribution.

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