common sense tells me that when I have two numbers x and y and I know one is a % of the other(in other words one is a fraction of the other) , then the answer is always x/y * 100 or y/x* 100 ......
Unfortunately, my common sense is fallible. Consequently, I'd rather rely on a more foolproof method, so that I don't misinterpret the question.
Let me follow your reasoning for a sec...you are not being consistent in the us of the word "is" and "of"
No offense, but I believe that by following the rules I'm actually the one being more consistent.
in case one: what % "of 10" "is 6"
you correctly did (% = z/100) * "of 10" = "is 6"
notice you implied "of 10" is the whole and "is 6" is the part
No, I implied that '
of' meant '
times' and '
is' meant '
='.
case 2: what % "is 6" "of 10"
you did (% = z/100) = "of 10" * "is 6" ...how does 6 of 10 translate to 6*10
'6 of 10' translates to '6 x 10' when '
of' means '
times'.
It basically comes down to how we interpret the usage of '
of' in this context. I'd never heard/seen this type of usage before, hence the query. I actually thought it was a trick question rather than a simple one.
Now, in no way am I advocating that the word '
of'
always means '
times'. If I had added the word '
out' to the question I would have interpreted it differently:
What percent is x out of y?In this case, I'm happy to concede that the question translates to
z/100 =
x/
y, because I recognise that '
out of' means '
divided by'. Take for example the following phrase:
'5
out of 10 people drink milk every day'.
We wouldn't say '5 of 10 people drink milk every day'. Having said that, I doubt a question would use the words '
out of' in the first place. The question would most likely just use '
/' symbol or express '
x/y' as a fraction using a graphic.
Either way, Ron admitted that this question was poorly worded, so I'm happy to leave it at that.