Question
If the frequency of a value in a frequency table is 10, and the total number of outcomes is 27, what is the relative frequency of this value?
Answers
GPT-4o mini
To calculate the relative frequency of a value in a frequency table, you can use the formula:
\[
\text{Relative Frequency} = \frac{\text{Frequency of the value}}{\text{Total number of outcomes}}
\]
In this case, the frequency of the value is 10, and the total number of outcomes is 27. Plugging in these numbers:
\[
\text{Relative Frequency} = \frac{10}{27}
\]
To express this as a decimal or a percentage, you can perform the division:
\[
\frac{10}{27} \approx 0.3704
\]
To express this as a percentage, multiply by 100:
\[
0.3704 \times 100 \approx 37.04\%
\]
Thus, the relative frequency of the value is approximately \(0.3704\) or \(37.04\%\).
\[
\text{Relative Frequency} = \frac{\text{Frequency of the value}}{\text{Total number of outcomes}}
\]
In this case, the frequency of the value is 10, and the total number of outcomes is 27. Plugging in these numbers:
\[
\text{Relative Frequency} = \frac{10}{27}
\]
To express this as a decimal or a percentage, you can perform the division:
\[
\frac{10}{27} \approx 0.3704
\]
To express this as a percentage, multiply by 100:
\[
0.3704 \times 100 \approx 37.04\%
\]
Thus, the relative frequency of the value is approximately \(0.3704\) or \(37.04\%\).