G Gclear New member Joined Jun 25, 2016 Messages 2 Jun 25, 2016 #1 Hi, If £1=€1.20 and €0.90=$1.40 how much is $150 in £ and why? I would be able to rationalise if £1=€1.20 and €1=$1.40 Thanks
Hi, If £1=€1.20 and €0.90=$1.40 how much is $150 in £ and why? I would be able to rationalise if £1=€1.20 and €1=$1.40 Thanks
G Gclear New member Joined Jun 25, 2016 Messages 2 Jun 25, 2016 #2 Hi, If £1=€1.20 and €0.90=$1.40 how much is $150 in £ and why? I would understand if £1=€1.20 and €1=$1.40 but the difference in displaying the rates has confused me.
Hi, If £1=€1.20 and €0.90=$1.40 how much is $150 in £ and why? I would understand if £1=€1.20 and €1=$1.40 but the difference in displaying the rates has confused me.
D Deleted member 4993 Guest Jun 25, 2016 #3 Gclear said: Hi, If £1=€1.20 and €0.90=$1.40 how much is $150 in £ and why? I would be able to rationalise if £1=€1.20 and €1=$1.40 Thanks Click to expand... Let's do a similar but different problem: If £2=€1.20 and €1.90=$1.40 how much is $200 in £ and why? $1 = €(1.90/1.40) = £[(2/1.20)*(1.90/1.40)] = £[2.261905] $200 = £[452.38]
Gclear said: Hi, If £1=€1.20 and €0.90=$1.40 how much is $150 in £ and why? I would be able to rationalise if £1=€1.20 and €1=$1.40 Thanks Click to expand... Let's do a similar but different problem: If £2=€1.20 and €1.90=$1.40 how much is $200 in £ and why? $1 = €(1.90/1.40) = £[(2/1.20)*(1.90/1.40)] = £[2.261905] $200 = £[452.38]