| George Albert Wentworth - 1898 - 424 pages
...Multiply each of the debts by the number of days from the standard date to the date that it becomes due, and divide the sum of the products by the sum of the debts. EXERCISE 135. 1. Find the equated time for the payment of $250 due in 3 mo., $400 due in 6 mo.,... | |
| George Albert Wentworth - Arithmetic - 1898 - 424 pages
...Multiply each of the debts by the number of days from the standard date to the date that it becomes due, and divide the sum of the products by the sum of the debts. The quotient is the number of days that must be added to the standard date to find the average... | |
| George King - Accident insurance premiums - 1898 - 122 pages
...time of payment of various amounts, multiply each amount by the time to elapse until it will fall due, and divide the sum of the products by the sum of the amounts. The value found for x is, however, too large. It results from taking the arithmetical mean,... | |
| George Albert Wentworth - Arithmetic - 1898 - 424 pages
...Multiply each of the debts by the number of days from the standard date to the date that it becomes due, and divide the sum- of the products by the sum of the debts. EXERCISE 135. 1. Find the equated time for the payment of $250 due in 3 mo., $400 due in 6 mo.,... | |
| International Correspondence Schools - Bookkeeping - 1899 - 650 pages
...reference the date when tile first debt is due, find tlie term of credit for each debt. Multiply each debt by its term of credit, and divide the sum of the products by the sum of the debts. The quotient to the nearest integer will be the number of days from the date of reference to... | |
| George Edward Atwood - Arithmetic - 1899 - 392 pages
...equated time of payment when the terms of credit begin at the same time. RULE. — • Multiply each debt by its term of credit and divide the sum of the products by the sum of the debts. The quotient will be the average term of credit. Add the average term of credit to the date... | |
| Edward Brooks - Arithmetic - 1899 - 204 pages
...would have a credit of 7J5 of 2600 months, which is 3J months. Hence the Rule. — Multiply each debt by its term of credit, and divide the sum of the products by the sum of the debts; the quotient will be the average term of credit. 1. Cents in any of the payments may be rejected... | |
| International Correspondence Schools - Civil engineering - 1899 - 596 pages
...composing the section by the distance of its center of gravity from some given or assumed horizontal line, and divide the sum of the products by the sum of the areas (or weights). The quotient will be the distance of the center of gravity of the entire section... | |
| Mansfield Merriman - Geodesy - 1899 - 274 pages
...method of computing it is frequently expressed by the rule: Multiply each observation by its weight and divide the sum of the products by the sum of the weights. ability of error given by (2), assuming that Jf represents the weight of the observation whose... | |
| Frederick Rollins Low - Steam-engines - 1900 - 60 pages
...the other ends of the cylinders that are involved. We must multiply each volume by its own pressure and divide the sum of the products by the sum of the volumes. This will give us the pressure of the mixture 75 X 2 = 150 30 X 4 = 120 45 This will be the... | |
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