The answer depends on what the forecast was about and how you interpret accurate.
Consider weather forecasts.
If the weather forecast was "sunny", how much cloud cover is acceptable before the forecast is considered wrong?
If the forecast was "dry" would a 5 second drizzle mean a total *FAIL*?
Does "rainy" range from a fleeting drizzle to a tropical downpour?
Also, if the forecast for a region was sunny, and it was sunny in 95% of the region, but in 5% of the region it was not sunny for 5 minutes, does that count as a failure?
It is critically important that all forecast terms are unambiguous and that all thresholds are very clearly defined.
Similar considerations will apply in forecasts of other unknowns.
Meteorologists are not always 100% right because the weather forecast that is given is based on an estimation of weather patterns in the state and region the forecast is for. Weather is also extremely unpredictable so it is very difficult to get it accurate all the time.
Retail = cost*(1+markup/100)
A forecast for Earthquack
The formula to calculate split times is given by percent of time= (2-4*phi)* (percent of distance) ^2 + ((4*phi)-1) *percent of distance). Positive splits and negative splits are the two types of splits.
How to calculate sale price if marked price and percent discount are given:First change the percent discount to a decimal.You then multiply the percent discount in decimal form by the marked price.Finally, you subtract the answer from the multiplication problem from the marked price, and get your final answer!
"Extrapolation" or "forecast".
Suppose percent discount is D. Then Marked Price = Sale Price/(1-D/100)
No. There is a 60% chance that on a given day there will be no rain at a given location in the forecast area. But for two days that reduces to 36% ( .6x.6), and to 21% (.6x.6 x.6 ) for three days, etc., based on probability.
Cost Price=(100/(100-loss percent))* Selling Price
To find the percent composition of NaHCO3 in a sample, you would calculate the mass of NaHCO3 in the sample divided by the total mass of the sample, then multiply by 100 to get the percentage.
The last one hundred times that these conditions existed, it rained twenty times ... is a good way of describing that forecast. According to The National Weather Service, Probability of Precipitation, or PoP, is defined as,"PoP=C x A where C= the confidence that precipitation will occur somewhere in the forecast area and where A= the percent of the area that will receive measurable precipitation, if it occurs at all. It is the likelihood of occurrence (expressed as a percent) of a precipitation event at any given point in the forecast area. Since the equation used to arrive at PoP contains a value for "Percent of Areal Coverage", the result of the equation produces a number that also expresses the percent of areal coverage.
Percent error refers to the percentage difference between a measured value and an accepted value. To calculate the percentage error for density of pennies, the formula is given as: percent error = [(measured value - accepted value) / accepted value] x 100.