 To create a histogram of continuous data, you need to establish the lower and upper limit of the bends. In this particular example, we have a count of 400 with a minimum of 4.6 and a max of 4.9. The range is just the difference between those two, E6 minus E5. In this assignment, we were told to have eight bends and we wanted the bend width rounded up to the nearest one hundredth. So if we take the range and divide it by the number of bends, we get the bend width. And then we need to use the rounding function here. I use the round up because you always want to round up when you're finding bend limits. And I set it to round that value to two decimal places, which would give me one hundredth. To start, we want to be able to set the lower limit on the lowest bend so that it captures all the data. And the best way to do that is just to make it equal to the minimum value. And then we can establish the lower limits on the other bends by clicking in that cell equal the limit there plus the rounded bend width. And we're going to lock that using the F4 key. And now I can drag this down to get my bends, the lower limits. And notice that I have a catch all bend label over here on the end. The upper limits need to be different a little bit from the next bend's lower limit because you want data to go into one bend or the other. And if it was exactly equal, then of course the data could be into places. So what I like to do is to equal that next bend's lower limit and then subtract a small number. Here I'm going to click minus. And since our data only has two decimal places, I'm just going to put a small number there. Point zero zero zero zero one. And that gives me the upper limit for my first. And now I can just drag that down to get all of these. And of course this last one doesn't make any sense. So those are my upper limits. And now I can use those upper limits with any of the Excel tools to create the histogram. Thank you.