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%
if you get 22 questions wrong, you will have a 78%. less then 22 wrong would mean a higher percentage and more then 22 wrong would mean a lower percentage.
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.
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%
if you get 22 questions wrong, you will have a 78%. less then 22 wrong would mean a higher percentage and more then 22 wrong would mean a lower percentage.
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%.
You can get up to 150 questions wrong.