The exact mileage per year is the odometer reading at the end of the year minus the odometer reading at the beginning of the year.
If you don't have the odometer reading from the beginning of the year, the next best thing is to subtract an older odometer reading from the reading at the beginning of the year, then divide the difference by the number of years between readings. Without any odometer readings from the past, the best you can do is to calculate the average annual mileage over the life of the truck, which is the current odometer reading divided by the truck's years of service.
It is 100*staff costs/total costs.
Total Surface Area = 6L2. Where L = the length of one side of the cube.
by using the capture-recapture method which gives you the total size of organisms in a population.
the number of complications in a certain period divided by the total number of patients for the same period
You never "calculate the edges". You may need to calculate, for example, their individual length, their collective total length, the distance between them, the area or the volume bounded by them, their slopes or directions, or the number of them that exist on a cube. You'd need a different formula for each of these operations.
(answer)+(answer)= TOTAL
Formula for calculating depreciation value Annual depreciation value = (Total cost - salvage value (if any) ) / useful life
Total Cash Flow / 5years = Average Annual profit
If you are to be given all the month's precipitation. Add the precipitation of all 12 months, and that should leave you with the answer to the total annual precipitation. That's it. Just add everything :D
Annual sales / Total Sq Ft
how to calculate total operating income in Manufacturing Sector
It is 100*staff costs/total costs.
we can calculate total number of rows in truth table by the formula (2^n) here n=number of input variable.
(securities - liabilities)/(# of outstanding shares)
Room revnue divided by total no. Of room occupied
Total Surface Area = 6L2. Where L = the length of one side of the cube.
A simple profit formula reconciles revenue to losses and expenses. Profit equals the total revenue subtracted by losses and expenses.