Probability
Full Member
- Joined
- Jan 26, 2012
- Messages
- 431
How to get your legs kicked from under you!
I have this old math book which is over 10 years old. I did the course back then but do like a little revision now and again to try and keep the brain active.
In this book we were told that when rounding number like 91.2 or 91.5 then we should round appropriately. We were told that numbers less than 0.5 should be rounded down, while number 0.5 or more should be rounded up. Later we were shown how to round distance measurements to 9 s.f, which is very accurate in deed! Then we were advised about rounding to the nearest mile. So 91.2 would become 91 while 91.5 would become 92.
Using a much less accurate conversion factor we were then asked to convert 465 km to miles using 0.62 as a conversion factor, hence you can only attain the answer 288.3 miles. We were then asked to round this number appropriately, so given the previous understanding I'd of gone for 288 miles!
Previously in this course material we were advised and shown that it was not correct to write conversions like this; 2.3971 = 2.40 They are not equal.
Part of the question asked to explain why the answer given 288 miles was not accurate. Obviously because the conversion factor being 0.62 against the original conversion factor having 9 significant places would do it.
I then looked up the authors solution and found that 288.3 miles was agreed as I'd calculated it, however my rounded answer of 288 miles was somewhat different to the authors who had said that rounding the answer to 2 s.f gave 289, he said the answer found here agrees with the answer found in the calculation, hence; 289 = 290 to 2 s.f.
While I do fully agree with the coursework book being correct, and it is, I'm somewhat at a loss at the moment what the author was thinking when the solution was written. I know you'd need full facts but I can't post it was copyright material. It seems learning from a book (when under pressure) has its downfalls.
I have this old math book which is over 10 years old. I did the course back then but do like a little revision now and again to try and keep the brain active.
In this book we were told that when rounding number like 91.2 or 91.5 then we should round appropriately. We were told that numbers less than 0.5 should be rounded down, while number 0.5 or more should be rounded up. Later we were shown how to round distance measurements to 9 s.f, which is very accurate in deed! Then we were advised about rounding to the nearest mile. So 91.2 would become 91 while 91.5 would become 92.
Using a much less accurate conversion factor we were then asked to convert 465 km to miles using 0.62 as a conversion factor, hence you can only attain the answer 288.3 miles. We were then asked to round this number appropriately, so given the previous understanding I'd of gone for 288 miles!
Previously in this course material we were advised and shown that it was not correct to write conversions like this; 2.3971 = 2.40 They are not equal.
Part of the question asked to explain why the answer given 288 miles was not accurate. Obviously because the conversion factor being 0.62 against the original conversion factor having 9 significant places would do it.
I then looked up the authors solution and found that 288.3 miles was agreed as I'd calculated it, however my rounded answer of 288 miles was somewhat different to the authors who had said that rounding the answer to 2 s.f gave 289, he said the answer found here agrees with the answer found in the calculation, hence; 289 = 290 to 2 s.f.
While I do fully agree with the coursework book being correct, and it is, I'm somewhat at a loss at the moment what the author was thinking when the solution was written. I know you'd need full facts but I can't post it was copyright material. It seems learning from a book (when under pressure) has its downfalls.