I am going to use Big Class as an example to illustrate one approach.
If you don't know what "Big Class" is, first go to JMP menu and click "Help", then "Sample Index", find the button in the following screenshot and click it. It will open "Big Class" data table.
![peng_liu_0-1682878645233.png peng_liu_0-1682878645233.png](https://community.jmp.com/t5/image/serverpage/image-id/52472iE1421CF63AABF141/image-size/medium?v=v2&px=400)
Now go to JMP's Analyze menu, find "Reliability and Survival" sub-menu, then select "Life Distribution". Configure the dialog as follows:
![peng_liu_1-1682878742138.png peng_liu_1-1682878742138.png](https://community.jmp.com/t5/image/serverpage/image-id/52473i4BC911AFA9D95535/image-size/medium?v=v2&px=400)
This is to illustrate how to compare "weight" between two genders. Here is the report.
![peng_liu_2-1682878821348.png peng_liu_2-1682878821348.png](https://community.jmp.com/t5/image/serverpage/image-id/52474iB8A9855E0FBCF9F4/image-size/medium?v=v2&px=400)
There can be different perspectives, depending how you would like to compare them, and what are important to you. From the perspective of whether the distributions of "weight" are significantly different between male and female, the result says nay.