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Math Help for Section 3.3, Page 121

Example
5: Tip

Both of these problems fit question type #3 from the guide in the Math Help on page 119:

Question$\quad\quad\quad\quad$ Given Percent Equation
3. a
is what percent of b?
a and b Solve for p.

Example
5: Check

a.  
 
$\eqalign{135 =&
p(27)&{\small\color{red}\quad\quad\text{Write original equation.}} \cr
135\overset{?}{=}&\left({\color{red}5}
\right)(27)&{\small\color{red}\quad\quad\text{Substitute 5 for }p.} \cr 135 =&
135&{\small\color{red}\quad\quad\text{Solution checks. }\checkmark} \cr} $
 
b. $\eqalign{8092.5 =&
p(124,500)&{\small\color{red}\quad\quad\text{Write original equation.}} \cr 8092.5
\overset{?}{=}&\left({\color{red}0.065}
\right)(124,500)&{\small\color{red}\quad\quad\text{Substitute 0.065 for }p.} \cr8092.5
=&8092.5&{\small\color{red}\quad\quad\text{Solution checks. }\checkmark} \cr}$

Study
Tip

Recall from Section 1.4 that some fractional numbers can be represented
by repeating decimals. To represent these numbers, you can put a bar
over the repeated digit(s). For instance,

    $\displaystyle{4\over{1800}} =
0.00222… = 0.00\overline 2 .$

You can use this equivalence when finding percents. Here is an
example.

Question: 4 is what percent of 1800?
Solution: $\quad\quad\;\;4 =
p\left( {1800} \right)$
Substitute
values into percent equation.
$\displaystyle{4
\over {1800}} = p\quad\quad$
Divide each
side by 1800.

Once you have $p ={4 \over {1800}},$ you can write it as a
repeating decimal, then convert it to a percent:

    $\displaystyle{4 \over {1800}} =
0.00\overline 2 = 0.00\overline 2 \left( {100\% } \right) =
0.\overline 2 \% $

or you can leave it a fraction, convert it to a percent, and
then reduce the fraction:

    $\displaystyle{4 \over {1800}} = {4
\over {1800}}\left( {100\% } \right) = {{400} \over {1800}}\%
= {{2 \bullet \cancel{200}} \over {9 \bullet
\cancel{200}}}\% = {2 \over 9}\% $

$0.\overline 2 \% $ is equivalent to ${2 \over 9}\% .$



 

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