1 wrong out of 200 means 199 correct.
So 100*199/200 % = 99.5 % correct.
The percentage score depends on whether all questions carry the same mark, whether or not there is a penalty for a wrong answer.
Wrong . . . . . 2.86% Correct . . . . 97.14%
(2/30)*100 =6.666666666666667% wrong
72% correct 28% wrong on a test, it would be 72%
It depends how many points each question is worth. If each question is worth five points on a twenty question test, you would get ninety-five percent.
To find the percentage of questions that were wrong on the test, you would first calculate the total number of questions answered incorrectly, which is 6. Then, you would divide this by the total number of questions on the test, which is 28. Finally, you would multiply this result by 100 to convert it to a percentage. Therefore, the percentage of questions answered incorrectly on the test is (6/28) x 100 = 21.43%.
Wrong . . . . . 2.86% Correct . . . . 97.14%
40-26=14 questions answered correctly. 14/40=.35 Therefore the percentage of the test would be 35%
(2/30)*100 =6.666666666666667% wrong
72% correct 28% wrong on a test, it would be 72%
To get two wrong from 1 question is quite an achievement. I would imagine the outcome is not gradeable. That level of effort should certainly be worth two 'F's .
The score would be 56%
It depends how many points each question is worth. If each question is worth five points on a twenty question test, you would get ninety-five percent.
75% I just go the question wrong on my test and I picked 50%. The answer is 75%
66% That's a D.
You would divide ten by fourteen. The answer would be 71.4%.
It is: 75%
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