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Percentages

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mollykins | 16:47 Mon 21st Jun 2010 | Science
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I don't know if this is posible or if it'll make sense but . . . .if you are given a percentage such as 50% for a test score for example, can you work out the minimum thing that the test was out of, without knowing how many marks you got, just the percentage, if all numbers a integers that is. If it was 50% then the minimum it could be out of was two but that's easy to work out.
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100 divided by the percentage you got.
Opps, sorry, didn't read the question fully.... ignore me :)
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I thought that didn't sound right and was expecting a complicated answer.
if all you have is a percentage then you cant work out what the score was or what a full score was.
No. 2 is 50% of 4 and 3 is 50% of 6
50% just indicates half.
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You might not be able to work out the specific full score but could you work out the minimum, is what I'm asking.

Like 50% could be from any even number, but the minimum, positive I should add, integer would be two.
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I didn't think this would make sense.

If you knew a score from a test was 50%, that score could be one, meaning the minimum possible full marks would be two.
are all marks full marks? or are half marks awarded?
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I did say all numbers are integers.
write the % as a fraction so 50% = 50/100
then reduce the fraction as far as possible. the denominator will be the number of questions
so 60% would be 60/100 = 3/5, so there would be 5 questions.
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Oh yeah, I supose it would be, thanks flo.
Yes - change your percentage to a fraction, and reduce the fraction to its lowest possible denominator. That denominator is the minimum number of questions the test could have. E.g., you got 85.71%, that's 6/7, so the test would have to have at least 7 questions. (Could also be 12/14, 18/21, etc.)
As auntflo pointed out so well.
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It's obvious now, but I was wondering this and just couldn't think and got a mental block. thanks x molly
Now, Molly, your challenge is to work out an algebraic function which does this automatically e.g.

x = <function>n

where x is the result and n is the given variable...
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NNNNOOOOOOOO . . . . I've escaped from maths until september now !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!


coincidentally, what is the answer?
Anyway, how do you know the percentage figures you have been given haven't been rounded. For example the 50% figure you meantioned could have been 49.5% unrounded and the score may have been 99 out of 200.
I'm wondering why you want to know.
If 60% was the pass mark and you only achieved 50% then you have failed.
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factor, I did say that all numbers are integers.

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