95/100
You can't. Grams is a unit of measurement, where percent is a way of showing the portion of the whole, and therefore varies. For instance. if something weighs 100g, 10g is 10% of the thing, but if it weighs 1000g, then 100g is 10% of it's weight. If looking for percentage of daily recommended allowance, then you have to know the total recommended allowance for that thing, then you can divide the number of grams of that material in the item in question by the total recommended daily allowance. that will give you a decimal number less than 1. this decimal equivilant can then be multiplied by 100 to give you the percent value. For Example if the RDA is 1000g and the item has 200g in it, 1000 divided by 200 = .2. Multiply .2 times 100 and you get 20, which is the percentage of the RDA that that item has in it.
10 percent of a worker's daily wage is 0.10 times the daily wage.For example, if someone makes $40 a day, $40 x 0.10 is $4.00.If the daily wage is $37.50 a day, it is $37.50 x 0.10 or $3.75.
it matters, for how long?
Exercise
We use 99.9 percent of math in our everyday life.
how can you apply economics in daily or weekly allowance
daily or weekly allowance
Trans fats are to be avoided for proper dietary measures. The RDA (Recommended Daily Allowance) for trans fats is less than 1 percent of the caloric daily intake
Is sumptuary allowance and daily allowance paid to the minister in india are taxable
It is "Recommended Daily Allowance"
Really....
Depending on the age of the boy, you can estimate a daily recommended allowance for calories to be in between 1500 to 2000 (with the later being the allowance for an Adult Male).
Based on a 2000 calorie diet (the standard on nutrition fact information) 65 grams of fat is 100% of your daily allowance
The recommended daily caloric allowance for an adult female is 2,200 calories. For a male, the allowance is 2,700 calories. The actual amount of calories needed depends on age and level of activity.
Total, touted as a product containing 100 percent of the officially established U.S. recommended daily allowance (RDA) of vitamins and iron, was introduced in 1961
32 oz.
15 milligrams