by mschwrtz Tue Jun 29, 2010 1:21 am
adiagr's answer is perfectly correct. It's much more important, ashwinrkamath, that you develop such a method to avoid errors than it is that you understand exactly what error you made.
Still, it must be frustrating to not see how your math could be wrong, so let's expand a bit.
-I think that you, ashwinrkamath, lost track of what those numbers represented. 6000 is the number who own just a car, just a motorcycle, or both a car and a motorcycle (6000=c+m+b). 5200 is the number who own a just a car, or both a car and a motorcycle (5200=c+b). That leaves 800 who own just a motorcycle (800=m).
-The double-set matrix to which adiagr refers is the ideal default tool for overlapping-set questions, questions in which one group (e.g. the town's residents) are divided according to two distinct yes-no criteria (e.g. owning or not owning a car, owning or not owning a motorcycle).
-Only a few questions about such overlapping sets can be readily answered without appeal to a DSM.
-This might be one of them, but there's no real reason to pursue that if you don't see it right away. Just use the DSM.
-This question relies on a property of overlapping sets, that the union of two sets (e.g. the number who own just a car, just a motorcycle, or both a car and a motorcycle) is equal to the the sum of the two sets (e.g. car owners PLUS the motorcycle owners) minus the overlap (e.g. the number who own both a car and a motorcycle).
-In this case, and in percent terms, that means that 75%=(65%+55%)-45%. If 55% own a motorcycle, and 45% own both a car and a motorcycle, then 10% own just a motorcycle.