| 1905 - 1170 pages
...subject. Multiply the average in each subject by the number indicating the relative weight of the subject and divide the sum of the products by the sum of the relative weights; the quotient will be the general average. No candidate will be passed who shall not... | |
| Civil engineering - 1906 - 590 pages
...days; and for $500 the term of credit is from Mar. 1 to June 25, or 116 days. We multiply each debt by its term of credit, and divide the sum of the products by the sum of the debts. The quotient, 68 days, is the number of days after Mar. 1 when one payment of the whole indebtedness... | |
| James S. Sweet - Business mathematics - 1907 - 268 pages
...demanded. CASE I 831. To find the Average Term of Credit and the Equated Date. 1. Multiply each item by Us term of Credit, and divide the sum of the products by the sum of the items. The quotient is the average term of credit. 2. Compute the average term of credit from the focal... | |
| James S. Sweet - Business mathematics - 1908 - 288 pages
...demanded. CASE I 831. To find the Average Term of Credit and the Equated Date. 1. Multiply each item by its term of Credit, and divide the sum of the products by the sum of the items. The quotient is the average term of credit. 2. Compute the average term of credit from the focal... | |
| Wesley Clair Mitchell - Business & Economics - 1908 - 870 pages
...for 17 of his 21 industries, weight them by figures obtained from the census returns for occupations, and divide the sum of the products by the sum of the weights. This procedure does not eliminate the original errors in the averages for industries; and... | |
| Charles H. Daggett - Chemistry - 1910 - 544 pages
...amounts of the several ingredients by their percentage strengths, add the products and also the amounts, and divide the sum of the products by the sum of the amounts. Example. — Six pounds of opium containing 8 per cent, of morphine, 4 pounds containing ;>... | |
| West Virginia - 1911 - 1518 pages
...subject. Alultiply the mark in each subject by the number indicating the relative weight of the subject and divide the sum of the products by the sum of the relative weights; the quotient will ba the general average. No candidate will be passed by the board... | |
| United States. War Department - 400 pages
...subject. Multiply the average in each subject by the number indicating the relative weight of the subject and divide the sum of the products by the sum of the relative weights, the quotient will be the general average. No candidate will be passed by the board... | |
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