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Examples:
100% means all.
Example:
100% of 80 is 100100 × 80 = 80
50% means half.
Example:
50% of 80 is 50100 × 80 = 40
5% means 5/100ths.
Example:
5% of 80 is 5100 × 80 = 4
Using Percent
When 100% =
80
then:
75% = 60
And 100% is 100100, or exactly 1 (100% of any number is just the number,
unchanged)
And 200% is 200100, or exactly 2 (200% of any number is twice the number)
As a percentage: 50%
As a decimal: 0.5
1
As a fraction: /2
And 25100 × 80 = 20
So 25% of 80 is 20
Example: 15% of 200 apples are bad. How many apples are
bad?
15% = 15100
25% = 25100
And 25100 × $120 = $30
Calculation Trick
This little rule can make some calculations easier:
x% of y = y% of x
Example: 8% of 50
And 50% of 8 is 4
So 8% of 50 is also 4
The Word
"Percent" comes from the latin Per Centum. The latin word Centum means 100,
for example a Century is 100 years.
Percent vs Percentage
My Dictionary says "Percentage" is the "result obtained by multiplying a
quantity by a percent". So 10 percent of 50 apples is 5 apples: the 5 apples is
the percentage.
But in practice people use both words the same way.
Percentage Difference
The percentage difference is:
The difference between two values divided by the average of the two values.
Shown as a percentage.
Example continued
Example continued
Difference is 25 − 15 = 10
Average is (25 + 15) / 2 = 20
10 as a percentage of 20 is:
Example continued
Now let's find out when, why and how to use it ...
But if there is an old value and a new value, we should use Percentage Change
Or if there is an approximate value and an exact value, we should
use Percentage Error
Example continued
But which one should we use? And if someone else did the calculations which
one would they use?
Difference = 6 − 9 = −3
But in this case we ignore the minus sign, so we say the difference is simply 3
How to Calculate
Step 1: Calculate the difference (subtract one value form the other) ignore any
negative sign
Step 2: Calculate the average (add the values, then divide by 2)
Step 3: Divide the difference by the average
Step 3: Convert that to a percentage (by multiplying by 100 and adding a "%" sign)
Examples
Example: Juice costs $4 in one shop and $6 in another shop, what is
the percentage difference?
Step 1: The difference is 4 − 6 = −2, but ignore the minus sign: difference=2
Step 2: The average is (4 + 6)/2 = 10/2 = 5
Step 2: Divide: 2/5 = 0.4
Step 3: Convert 0.4 to percentage: 0.4×100 = 40%.
Another Example: There were 160 smarties in one box, and 116 in
another box, what is the percentage difference?
The Formula
You can also put the values into this formula:
(The "|" symbols mean absolute value , so any negatives become positive)
Example: "Best Shoes" gets 200 customers, and "Cheap Shoes" gets
240 customers:
This makes it clear that you do not mean a relative change (ie some fraction of
the original value).
Example:
Headline: "Interest Rates Jump From 10% to 12%"
Is 12/10 = 1.2 = 120%, so that is a
that: 20% rise.
O From 10% to 12% which is a 2%
r is that: rise?
So here are two correct ways to talk about a rise from 10% to 12%:
a rise of 20%
Basis Points
In financial markets they often use the term "Basis Points". A Basis Point is one
hundredth of a Percentage Point:
so:
Example:
As a fraction: 1
/2
0.
As a decimal:
5
5
As a percentage:
0%
As a fraction: 1
/4
0.
As a decimal:
25
2
As a percentage:
5%
2
5%
One Quarter
© 2015
MathsIsFun.com v 0.81
Example Values
Here is a table of commonly used values shown in Percent, Decimal and
Fraction form:
Percen De Fractio
t cimal n
0.0
1% 1
/100
1
0.0
5% 1
/20
5
10% 0.1 1
/10
0.1
12½% 1
/8
25
20% 0.2 1
/5
0.2
25% 1
/4
5
0.3
331/3% 1
/3
33...
50% 0.5 1
/2
0.7
75% 3
/4
5
80% 0.8 4
/5
90% 0.9 9
/10
0.9
99% 99
/100
9
100% 1
1.2
125% 5
/4
5
150% 1.5 3
/2
200% 2
Conversions
To convert from percent to decimal : divide by 100, and remove the "%" sign.
The easiest way to divide by 100 is to move the decimal point 2 places to
the left:
From To
Percent Decimal
To convert from decimal to percent : multiply by 100, and add a "%" sign.
The easiest way to multiply by 100 is to move the decimal point 2 places to
the right:
From To
Decimal Percent
The easiest way to convert a fraction to a decimal is to divide the top number
by the bottom number (divide the numerator by the denominator in
mathematical language)
Example: Convert 2
/5 to a decimal
Divide 2 by 5: 2 ÷ 5 = 0.4
0.
Multiply top and bottom by 10 for every number after the 75 × 100
decimal point (10 for 1 number, 100 for 2 numbers, etc) 1
× 100
7
5
(This makes a correctly formed fraction)
1
00
3
Then Simplify the fraction
4
FROM FRACTION TO PERCENTAGE
Example: Convert 3
/8 to a percentage
0
Write down the decimal "over" the number 1 .8
1
0
Multiply top and bottom by 10 for every number after the .8 × 10
decimal point (10 for 1 number, 100 for 2 numbers, etc) 1
× 10
8
(This makes a correctly formed fraction) 1
0
4
Then Simplify the fraction
5
Converting Between
Decimals, Fractions, and
Percents
Percent to DecimalPercent to FractionDecimal to FractionDecimal to PercentFraction to
DecimalFraction to PercentEquivalents
Purplemath
Percentages refer to fractions of a whole; that is, whatever you're looking at, the percentage is how
much of the whole thing you have. For instance, "50%" means "\frac{1}{2}21"; "25%" means
"\frac{1}{4}41"; "40%" means "\frac{2}{5}52"; et cetera.
Often you will need to figure out what percentage of something another thing is. For instance, if a
class has 26 students, and 14 are female, what percentage of the students are female? It is 14 out
of 26, or \frac{14}{26}2614 = 0.538461538462..., which is about 54%. (For more information on
MathHelp.com
"Percent" is actually "per cent", meaning "out of a hundred". (It comes from the Latin per centum for
"thoroughly hundred".) You can use this "out of a hundred" meaning, along with the fact
that fractions are division, to convertbetween fractions, percents, and decimals.
Percent to Decimal
Percent-to-decimal conversions are easy; you mostly just move the decimal point two places. The
way I keep it straight is to remember that 50%, or one-half, of a dollar is $0.50. In other words, I have
to move the decimal point two places to the left when I convert from a percent (50%) to
a decimal (0.50). To do any other percent-to-decimal conversion, I move the decimalpoint the same
number of places in the same direction, and drop the "%" character.
27% = 0.27
I dropped the "%" character and moved the decimal point two places to the left.
104% = 1.04
This percentage had three digits, so moving the decimal point two places to the left still left a digit on
the other side of the decimal point. You should expect this result from time to time.
0.5% = 0.005
This percentage already had a decimal place, which meant that the decimal form would have three.
Don't assume that your decimal forms will always have two decimal places; they can have many, or
even none. It'll depend on the percentage.
You can use the Mathway widget below to practice converting a percentage to a decimal. Try the
entered exercise, or type in your own exercise. Then click the button to compare your answer to
Mathway's. (Or skip the widget and continue with the lesson.)
Percent to Fraction
Percent-to-fraction conversions aren't too bad. This is where you use the fact that "percent" means
"out of a hundred". First you convert the percent to a decimal, and then you convert the decimal to
an out-of-a-hundred fraction. Then you simplify, if possible. For instance:
First I dropped the "%" character and moved the decimal point two places to the left. Then
I converted the decimalto an out-of-a-hundred fraction. Now I can reduce the fraction:
Most of these conversions are simple like the one above, but some require a little extra care. The
reason I converted to a decimal first is that the number of decimal places tells me how many zeroes
to have underneath. Notice that "0.40" can also be written as "0.4". Then 0.4 = \frac{4}{10} =
\frac{2}{5}104=52, which is the same answer as before. It works out because "0.4" has
one decimal place and "10" has one zero. This concept (matching the number of decimalplaces with
the number of zeroes) helps in more complicated problems:
Note that this percentage had a decimal place. This is what required the decimal to
have three decimal places. Don't just assume that all percentages will convert to two decimal places.
Pay attention to what you're doing!
Note here that the fraction is carried right along. Yes, the decimal point is moved two places to the
left, but the fraction doesn't budge. Then the resulting mixed number is placed over a hundred: two
zeroes for the two decimal places in the decimal form. The fraction does not count toward
the decimal places in your fractional form.
12\, \frac{1}{2}\% = 12.5\% = 0.125 = \dfrac{125}{1000} = \dfrac{1}{8}1221
%=12.5%=0.125=1000125=81
Because ½ is a terminating decimal (namely, 0.5), this percentage is simpler to convert than was the
previous one. Since the decimal form had three decimal places, the conversion fraction had three
zeroes in the denominator.
If you plan to take a business-math class, you should expect to need to work with percentages which
contain fractions. It's a good idea to understand how to do this stuff anyway, but I've only ever seen
it come up in business classes.
If you have a graphing calculator, you can probably have the calculator do this conversion for you.
Check your manual.