I am very bad at mathematics, so apologies in advance. My confusion comes from the voting system on an online poll. Example video (Picked at random): http://www.funnyordie.com/videos/4d0ac00700/youre-pitiful-weird-al-yankovic-ver-1-from-insane_ian
The percentage is 71%, meaning that some combination of "funny" or "die" votes added up to that. If 10 out of 100 people voted "funny" it would be easy to say that the percentage who thought it was funny is 10%, I am wondering how the number is derived taking both into account.
Hopefully I worded this correctly. I have a feeling it is something simple that I just don't remember. Thanks. I'm not sure what to tag this with, so I'm taking my best guess. Sorry if that's wrong.
Sorry, forgot to shift+enter. So 100X/Y (Does that mean 100 * (X/Y)?) is good for an unknown amount of options, but what works for just two?
– Daniel Jun 22 '12 at 02:44Regarding your first point, I was trying to understand your shorthand.
For the second point, I think we might be talking about two different things. On the website referenced, there are two different voting options. My question is how to derive one percentage by calculating the sum of both options together.
So X would equal Y in my scenario. There is no overall outside of "good" items. That's where the confusion for me comes in.
– Daniel Jun 22 '12 at 03:17