Using   the 10’s    digit   for the stem    and the units   digit   for the leaf    made    good    sense   with    this    data    set;
other   choices make    sense   depending   on  the type    of  data.   For example,    suppose we  had a   set of  gas
mileage tests   on  a   particular  car (e.g.,  28.3,   27.5,   28.1,   ...).   In  this    case,   it  might   make    sense   to  make    the
stems   the integer part    of  the number  and the leaf    the decimal part.   As  another example,    consider
measurements    on  a   microscopic computer    part    (0.0018,    0.0023, 0.0021, ...).   Here    you’d   probably    want
to  ignore  the 0.00    (since  that    doesn’t help    distinguish between the values) and use the first   nonzero digit
as  the stem    and the second  nonzero digit   as  the leaf.
Some    data    lend    themselves  to  breaking    the stem    into    two or  more    parts.  For these   data,   the stem    “4”
could   be  shown   with    leaves  broken  up  0–4 and 5–  9.  Done    this    way,    the stemplot    for the scores  data
would   look    like    this    (there  is  a   single  “1” because there   are no  leaves  with    the values  0–4 for a   stem    of  1;
similarly,  there   is  only    one “5” since   there   are no  values  in  the 55–59   range.):
The visual  image   is  of  data    that    are slightly    skewed  to  the right   (that   is, toward  the higher  scores).    We
do  notice  a   cluster of  scores  in  the high    20s that    was not obvious when    we  used    an  increment   of  10  rather
than    5.  There   is  no  hard-and-fast   rule    about   how to  break   up  the stems—it’s  easy    to  try different
arrangements    on  most    computer    packages.
Sometimes   plotting    more    than    one stemplot,   side-by-side    or  back-to-back,   can provide us  with
comparative information.    The following   stemplot    shows   the results of  two quizzes given   for this    class
(one    of  them    the one discussed   above):
