iSuckReallyBadAtMath
New member
- Joined
- Mar 3, 2016
- Messages
- 3
Just let me preface this by saying that I'm not a student or anything, I'm just really bad at math. I also don't really remember much of it from back when I was in school (and I was bad at it then too lol)...
I don't know if any of you reading this are following the US Democratic Primary (it's mostly irrelevant for the question), but it's Bernie Sanders running against Hillary Clinton. Only counting the pledged delegates earned from the states that have voted so far Bernie Sanders should have 349 and Hillary Clinton should have 544. NYT reports a different figure but that may be including US Territories or something, but it's not important as it pertains. Out of the states so far there should be a total of 1015 delegates that were up for grabs. 349+544 is only 893 so I assume the remainder went to third party candidates. That doesn't really matter.
What I'm trying to figure out is how far Bernie Sanders is behind Hillary Clinton. I've been using this because let's face it... you don't have to be able to do math to be able to use a tool like that. Or so I thought...
The way I figured it was that 349 is 64% of 544 (which doesn't seem to matter, I don't think?), but 349 is 34% of 1015 and 544 is 54% of 1015... so 54-34 should be 20% behind. It seems to "relatively" check out since 349 + (20% of 1015) = 552.
I've had someone else tell me that I'm doing it completely wrong though (which I don't doubt to be perfectly honest) but they said that I should take 544-349=195 and then do 195/544 = ~36% (0.35845588235294117647058823529412). But 349 + (36% of 1015) = 714.4 which seems wrong. I guess 195 + (36% of 1015) = 560.4 which makes somewhat more sense... but I really don't understand this entire method at all.
I don't know if any of you reading this are following the US Democratic Primary (it's mostly irrelevant for the question), but it's Bernie Sanders running against Hillary Clinton. Only counting the pledged delegates earned from the states that have voted so far Bernie Sanders should have 349 and Hillary Clinton should have 544. NYT reports a different figure but that may be including US Territories or something, but it's not important as it pertains. Out of the states so far there should be a total of 1015 delegates that were up for grabs. 349+544 is only 893 so I assume the remainder went to third party candidates. That doesn't really matter.
What I'm trying to figure out is how far Bernie Sanders is behind Hillary Clinton. I've been using this because let's face it... you don't have to be able to do math to be able to use a tool like that. Or so I thought...
The way I figured it was that 349 is 64% of 544 (which doesn't seem to matter, I don't think?), but 349 is 34% of 1015 and 544 is 54% of 1015... so 54-34 should be 20% behind. It seems to "relatively" check out since 349 + (20% of 1015) = 552.
I've had someone else tell me that I'm doing it completely wrong though (which I don't doubt to be perfectly honest) but they said that I should take 544-349=195 and then do 195/544 = ~36% (0.35845588235294117647058823529412). But 349 + (36% of 1015) = 714.4 which seems wrong. I guess 195 + (36% of 1015) = 560.4 which makes somewhat more sense... but I really don't understand this entire method at all.