 Hello, this is Professor Steven Nesheva, and I'm here to help you out with the setting up a histogram, and if you watched the last video then you will have seen that we've looked at all these temperatures and found out that the maximum value is this, the minimum value is this, and we've laid out a series of temperatures like this. So the next thing that I want to do is show you how to set up a histogram. Now it may be that you don't have the you don't have the tool pack already installed, so if you don't then you go to tools here in these Excel add-ins and hopefully something like this will show up and and then you can just add it in that way and it might be a different procedure if you're on VDesk, but once you're there now we can go to we can go to data analysis and the idea is that we are going to want to do a histogram and I might have to hunt around for it, and so there's the histogram and the histogram, the the data that we want is is this set of set of temperatures there and the bin range here is the thing that I've just laid out here, which is from here to here, and we're going to want to chart the output, so I'm going to click on that and I'm going to say okay, and hopefully it's going to come up with a histogram just like that. Now it comes up in a separate sheet here, but that's the basic idea here if you want to make it bigger, and of course what this is telling us is that the most maximum temperature is minus 55 and we kind of have this long tail into warmer temperatures and and so on, and that's how you set a histogram on Excel.