Franklin Posted January 24, 2006 Posted January 24, 2006 When can a hundred to one be equal to fifty fifty?
hw help Posted January 24, 2006 Posted January 24, 2006 When man re-invents math and changes the rule so that a hundred to one can equal fifty. Just kidding. I don't know. Hint plz?
ski_power Posted January 25, 2006 Posted January 25, 2006 when a 0 jumps from the hundred to one => 100:1 => 10:10 => 1:1 => 50:50 (multiply both sides by 50)
serg Posted January 25, 2006 Posted January 25, 2006 when a 0 jumps from the hundred to one => 100:1 => 10:10 => 1:1 => 50:50 (multiply both sides by 50) when they are odds.
Franklin Posted January 25, 2006 Author Posted January 25, 2006 when a 0 jumps from the hundred to one => 100:1 => 10:10 => 1:1 => 50:50 (multiply both sides by 50) Damn good answer but not what I was looking for.
Callipygous Posted January 25, 2006 Posted January 25, 2006 when the 100 is drug trafficers and the one is chuck norris.
JonM Posted January 27, 2006 Posted January 27, 2006 when you add them and multiply the others 100x1 = 100 50 + 50 = 100 So is that correct?
Franklin Posted January 28, 2006 Author Posted January 28, 2006 If you add all the numbers from 100 to 1 the sum total is 5050. There is a well known story about Karl Friedrich Gauss when he was in elementary school. His teacher got mad at the class and told them to add the numbers 1 to 100 and give him the answer by the end of the class. About 30 seconds later Gauss gave him the answer. The other kids were adding the numbers like this: 1 + 2 + 3 + . . . . + 99 + 100 = ? But Gauss rearranged the numbers to add them like this: (1 + 100) + (2 + 99) + (3 + 98) + . . . . + (50 + 51) = ? If you notice every pair of numbers adds up to 101. There are 50 pairs of numbers, so the answer is 50x101 = 5050. Of course Gauss came up with the answer about 20 times faster than the other kids.
why? Posted January 29, 2006 Posted January 29, 2006 How long does that take to do in a calculator? Did they have calculators?
starbug1 Posted January 29, 2006 Posted January 29, 2006 How long does that take to do in a calculator?Did they have calculators? Not in the eighteenth century.
ski_power Posted January 29, 2006 Posted January 29, 2006 oh and I put a ratio sign in between... just great!
The Thing Posted January 30, 2006 Posted January 30, 2006 JustStuit got the answer. That was before he edited. Now his answer is just wrong .
jyoticlub Posted February 7, 2006 Posted February 7, 2006 when a 0 jumps from the hundred to one => 100:1 => 10:10 => 1:1 => 50:50 (multiply both sides by 50) I cannot understand why 100:1 ==> 10:10 Can someone explain me
JustStuit Posted February 7, 2006 Posted February 7, 2006 JustStuit got the answer. That was before he edited.Now his answer is just wrong . lol no one responded so I tryed another way oh well
hotcommodity Posted March 1, 2006 Posted March 1, 2006 If you add all the numbers from 100 to 1 the sum total is 5050. There is a well known story about Karl Friedrich Gauss when he was in elementary school. His teacher got mad at the class and told them to add the numbers 1 to 100 and give him the answer by the end of the class. About 30 seconds later Gauss gave him the answer. The other kids were adding the numbers like this: 1 + 2 + 3 + . . . . + 99 + 100 = ? But Gauss rearranged the numbers to add them like this: (1 + 100) + (2 + 99) + (3 + 98) + . . . . + (50 + 51) = ? If you notice every pair of numbers adds up to 101. There are 50 pairs of numbers' date=' so the answer is 50x101 = 5050. Of course Gauss came up with the answer about 20 times faster than the other kids. [/quote'] Thanks for posting that. My Calculus professor was telling us the same thing the other day but he did'nt tell how Gauss grouped the numbers.
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