Susie has a bag with 8 hair pins, 6 pencils, 2 snacks, and 4 books. What is the ratio of books to pencils?

2 Answers
Jul 17, 2016

Ratio of books to pencils is #2/3# or written as 2:3

Explanation:

There are:

6 pencils
4 books

So the ratio of books to pencils is 4:6#larr" "#format some people use

Write this as #("books")/("pencils")-> 4/6#

But this is not in its simplest form as 2 will divide exactly into both numbers.

Divide top and bottom by 2 giving

#("books")/("pencils")-> (4-:2)/(6-:2) =2/3#

Ratio of books to pencils is #2/3# or written as 2:3
'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
#color(blue)("A further note just for information")#

This business of #4/6" being the same as "2/3# has a proper mathematical term.

They are 'equivalent fraction' as the answer to #4-:6# is exactly the same as the answer to #2-:3#

The correct way to write 'equivalent fractions' is #4/6-=2/3#

A lot of people write #4/6=2/3#

Jul 17, 2016

2:3

Explanation:

A ratio is a way of comparing 2 or more quantities.

A ratio may be expressed in 2 ways.

#color(orange)"(1) As a fraction"#

We require the ratio #color(red)"books"/color(blue)"pencils"#

Which 'looks' like a fraction, and if we insert the appropriate values.

That is #color(red)"books=4" " and " color(blue)"pencils=6"#

Then the ratio as a fraction is #color(red)"4"/color(blue)"6"#

This may be 'simplified' in the usual way by 'cancelling'.

#rArrcolor(red)cancel(4)^2/color(blue)cancel(6)^3=2/3#

#color(orange)"(2)Using a colon"#

instead of saying 2 'to' 3 we write 2:3 (which is read as 2 to 3)

Hence ratio = #color(red)"4":color(blue)"6"#

In this form we can multiply or divide each term in the ratio by the same number ( but not zero ).

Dividing each term by 2 the ratio becomes #4:6=2:3#

The ratio may be written as #2/3" or " 2:3#