FORUMula1.com - F1 Forum

Discuss the sport you love with other motorsport fans

Formula One related discussion.
User avatar
By sbhall
#146385
Are you serious? So if you start with 2 dollars today, and tommorrow I ask how much money do you have today? And you respond 2. Are you going to tell me that you just went up 100% in your money? No, you made no change at all, and so going from 2 one year to 2 the next year is NOT 100%. Doubling is 200%? :rofl: Please go back to school.

Maybe I should have wrote increase after 100%. Didn't think it was necessary :banghead:

Uh, yes, doubling is 200%. If we have 2, and it becomes 4, 4 is 200% of 2 because it is twice 2. 2, expressed as a percentage in this example, is 100%. So if you double the value, you double the vale as expressed as a percentage to give 200% of last year's total. You can then subtract the starting value, which gives you the percentage increase (100%). Saying something is X% of a previous value and hat the previous value changed by Y% to reach the new value are very different things.


I cant believe how complicated this got.

200% of 2 is 4
2 is 100% of 2
BUT
2 to 4 is an increase of 100%


"you could also say that overtaking was 200% that of last year. so it has worked."

Technically this statement is right but it is misleading. It is just a % value it has no direct correlation of comparision.

There is a 100% increase in overtaking in that race since last year. Now if it was 6 instead of 4 then it would have been 200% increase, which i think is the bit that is confussing, % increase compared to % value of any givin number.
User avatar
By Rivelution
#146390
Are you serious? So if you start with 2 dollars today, and tommorrow I ask how much money do you have today? And you respond 2. Are you going to tell me that you just went up 100% in your money? No, you made no change at all, and so going from 2 one year to 2 the next year is NOT 100%. Doubling is 200%? :rofl: Please go back to school.

Maybe I should have wrote increase after 100%. Didn't think it was necessary :banghead:

Uh, yes, doubling is 200%. If we have 2, and it becomes 4, 4 is 200% of 2 because it is twice 2. 2, expressed as a percentage in this example, is 100%. So if you double the value, you double the vale as expressed as a percentage to give 200% of last year's total. You can then subtract the starting value, which gives you the percentage increase (100%). Saying something is X% of a previous value and hat the previous value changed by Y% to reach the new value are very different things.


I cant believe how complicated this got.

200% of 2 is 4
2 is 100% of 2
BUT
2 to 4 is an increase of 100%


"you could also say that overtaking was 200% that of last year. so it has worked."

Technically this statement is right but it is misleading. It is just a % value it has no direct correlation of comparision.

There is a 100% increase in overtaking in that race since last year. Now if it was 6 instead of 4 then it would have been 200% increase, which i think is the bit that is confussing, % increase compared to % value of any givin number.



Damn thats some hardcore math!!! The only math I know is subtraction, and thats because I have to give 50 bucks to this girl everytime after we have sexual intercourse. Geeze, I just dont understand women these days...
































:hehe:
By dogheadf1
#146395
Are you serious? So if you start with 2 dollars today, and tommorrow I ask how much money do you have today? And you respond 2. Are you going to tell me that you just went up 100% in your money? No, you made no change at all, and so going from 2 one year to 2 the next year is NOT 100%. Doubling is 200%? :rofl: Please go back to school.

Maybe I should have wrote increase after 100%. Didn't think it was necessary :banghead:

Uh, yes, doubling is 200%. If we have 2, and it becomes 4, 4 is 200% of 2 because it is twice 2. 2, expressed as a percentage in this example, is 100%. So if you double the value, you double the vale as expressed as a percentage to give 200% of last year's total. You can then subtract the starting value, which gives you the percentage increase (100%). Saying something is X% of a previous value and hat the previous value changed by Y% to reach the new value are very different things.


I cant believe how complicated this got.

200% of 2 is 4
2 is 100% of 2
BUT
2 to 4 is an increase of 100%


"you could also say that overtaking was 200% that of last year. so it has worked."

Technically this statement is right but it is misleading. It is just a % value it has no direct correlation of comparision.

There is a 100% increase in overtaking in that race since last year. Now if it was 6 instead of 4 then it would have been 200% increase, which i think is the bit that is confussing, % increase compared to % value of any givin number.



Damn thats some hardcore math!!! The only math I know is subtraction, and thats because I have to give 50 bucks to this girl everytime after we have sexual intercourse. Geeze, I just dont understand women these days...
































:hehe:


If thats your only facing with maths?
and GET OVER IT!!
User avatar
By headless
#146437
Dear oh dear.
200% of 2 is not 4 it is 200.
You are all stupid.
User avatar
By darwin dali
#146444
Dear oh dear.
200% of 2 is not 4 it is 200.
You are all stupid.

Headless people have no say in this matter! :P
User avatar
By scotty
#146445
Wow, who thought maths taught to pre-teen kids would be the source of such contention? :-| Hopefully we can move on now that the technicalities have been explained...
User avatar
By headless
#146447
Dear oh dear.
200% of 2 is not 4 it is 200.
You are all stupid.

Headless people have no say in this matter! :P


:hehe: But almost as correct as some people with heads!

Wow, who thought maths taught to pre-teen kids would be the source of such contention? :-| Hopefully we can move on now that the technicalities have been explained...


I know. Thing is it is only one person that is disturbed and causing the outrage.
Hello, new member here

Yeah, not very active here, unfortunately. Is it […]

See our F1 related articles too!