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Re: Can anyone please explain this math problem? [#permalink]
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Shrivathsan wrote:
chetan2u wrote:
porkery wrote:
Attached. Much obliged!

number of students=5500(100-S)/100..where S is the % change over 5 academic years
number of faculty=5500/R*(100+F)/100..where F is the % change over 5 academic years..



Hi chetan2u,
Can you please tell me how you got the below step ?
100-S and 100+F ..

chetan2u wrote:
number of students=5500(100-S)/100..where S is the % change over 5 academic years
number of faculty=5500/R*(100+F)/100..where F is the % change over 5 academic years..


i din understand from where 100 came all of a sudden.. is there anything i am missing ? :oops:

just a query, is the answer (100-S)/(100+F) * R ?
cause the one mentioned in screenshot is different.


Hi,
There is a decrease in the number of students, say s%...
Then the student who were initially 5500 goes down to 5500*(100-s)/100..
Example.. the decrease was 20%, so number is 5500*(100-20)/100=5500*80/100..
Similarly for increase in faculty (100+F)/100..
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Re: Can anyone please explain this math problem? [#permalink]
chetan2u wrote:

Hi,
There is a decrease in the number of students, say s%...
Then the student who were initially 5500 goes down to 5500*(100-s)/100..
Example.. the decrease was 20%, so number is 5500*(100-20)/100=5500*80/100..
Similarly for increase in faculty (100+F)/100..


Thank you so much chetan2u for your explanation :) Kudos to you ..
But the answer given is
(100+S)/(100+F) * R

Since Students decrease, it should be 100-s right ?
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Re: Can anyone please explain this math problem? [#permalink]
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Shrivathsan wrote:
But the answer given is
(100+S)/(100+F) * R

Since Students decrease, it should be 100-s right ?


I think the process used is completely right, but there is a minor flaw.
S represents the change and not the decrease itself. The change has to be used as +S, and when the change is on the negative side (there is a decrease), S will assume a -ve value.

Example: If there is an increase, S = +5%, or in case of decrease, S = -7%
Over here in the working provided, in case of increase, S = -5% and in case of decrease, S = 7%. The general way of depiction is wrong.

Working is totally fine though.

Hope it helps :)
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Can anyone please explain this math problem? [#permalink]
testprepabc wrote:
The general way of depiction is wrong.

Thanks testprepabc

But they have provided S is decreasing right ?
Since the value is not given .. we are giving a general expression ?
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Re: Can anyone please explain this math problem? [#permalink]
Shrivathsan wrote:
But they have provided S is decreasing right ?
Since the value is not given .. we are giving a general expression ?

The question defines S to be a percentage change in the number of students. We need a formula which will generalize both the increase and the decrease. Hence the positive sign.
Small example: Let's say the question had 2 parts - One with a x% increase and the other with a x% decrease.
The easiest way to answer this is to write a formula which will satisfy both the equation instead of writing 2 formulae one with +S and the other with -S. Rather you would probably write a formula with +S and replace +S = x% for increase and +S = -x% for decrease.
A mathematical corollary would be formula for compound interest. We do not change the +ve sign in the bracket to -ve for decreasing Rs in A=P[1+(R/100)]^n, rather replace R with a -ve value.

Remember, formulae should be general and conventional.

Hope this explains and helps you :)
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Re: Can anyone please explain this math problem? [#permalink]
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