Can ratios really be manipulated as fractions? In high-school Maths, we were taught that it was pos

robinmarian9nhn8

robinmarian9nhn8

Answered question

2022-05-17

Can ratios really be manipulated as fractions?
In high-school Maths, we were taught that it was possible to manipulate ratios as fractions. For example,
1 : 7 = 3 : x 1 7 = 3 x x 7 = 3 x = 3 × 7 x = 21
My question relates to the second line of working, where we represent 1 : 7 as 1 7 . As I understand it, 1 : 7 s better represented as one part of 8 total parts, i.e. 1 8 My question, then, is this:
Is there a simple way of showing (or better still, a rigorous proof!) that a ratio-equation of the form a : n = b : m can in all cases be rewritten as a n = b m ?

Answer & Explanation

rynosluv101swv2s

rynosluv101swv2s

Beginner2022-05-18Added 19 answers

It does not actually matter; if you want to do this algebraically, consider writing
a : n = b : m
as a fraction in the terms that you're thinking in, i.e.:
a a + n = b b + m
then, so long as neither a nor b is 0, we can apply the function x 1 x to both sides of the equation without affecting its truth, yielding
a + n a = b + m b
which reduces to
1 + n a = 1 + m b
n a = m b
and applying x 1 x again to both sides, assuming neither n nor m is zero, gives:
a n = b m .
So, assuming none of the parts of the ratios are 0, the fraction representation will work just the same.
You would expect this to be true since exactly what a ratio means is ambiguous; the ratio a:n certainly is best interpreted as "a parts of one thing per b parts of another" - and you can uniquely associate a few rational numbers to such an idea. For instance, a b is the "conversion" ratio from b to a - i.e. if you multiply how much of the second thing you have by a b you retrieve how much of the first thing you have. Your fraction, a a + b represents how much of the total stuff between a and b is of the first thing. So, of course, you'd expect either representation to be valid where well-defined (since we're only concerned that the two fractions are equal if and only if the ratios were).

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