Returns the probability associated with t-test. Determines whether two samples are likely to have come from the same two underlying populations that have the same mean.
Sample Usage
T.TEST(A1:A4, B1:B4, 2, 1)
Syntax
T.TEST(range1, range2, tails, type)
-
range1- The first sample of data or group of cells to consider for the t-test. -
range2- The second sample of data or group of cells to consider for the t-test. -
tails- Specifies the number of distribution tails.- If
1: uses a one-tailed distribution. - If
2: uses a two-tailed distribution.
- If
-
type- Specifies the type of t-Test.- If
1: a paired test is performed. - If
2: a two-sample equal variance (homoscedastic) test is performed. - If
3: a two-sample unequal variance (heteroscedastic) test is performed.
- If
Notes
tailsandtypemust be numeric.range1andrange2must have the same number of data points.T.TESTuses the data inrange1andrange2to compute a non-negative test. Iftailsis set to1,T.TESTreturns the probability of a higher value of the t-statistic under the assumption thatrange1andrange2are samples from populations with the same mean. The value returned byT.TESTwhentailsis set to2is double that returned whentailsis set to1and corresponds to the probability of a higher absolute value of the t-statistic under the “same population means” assumption.- You can use
TTESTorT.TESTto perform this function.
Examples
In this example, a paired, two-tailed t-Test is computed on a student’s first and second quarter grades.