math.answers.com/math-and-arithmetic/How_do_you_find_the_average_of_a_number

Preview meta tags from the math.answers.com website.

Linked Hostnames

8

Thumbnail

Search Engine Appearance

Google

https://math.answers.com/math-and-arithmetic/How_do_you_find_the_average_of_a_number

How do you find the average of a number? - Answers

There's no such thing as the average of a single number. Well, no, technically that's not true. The average of a single number would be the same number. That's why "average" is pretty useless for a single number, and it's never used that way. Average means: You have this bunch of numbers ... two or more ... and they can be all different. You want to find some single number that if every one of the bunch was that number, they would all add up to the same total as they do now. Like, say the bunch of numbers is 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. They all add up to 15. Their average is 3, because if every one of them were 3, they would still add up to 3+3+3+3+3 = 15. How you find the average of a bunch of numbers: Add them all up, and divide the result by how many numbers there are in the bunch. So I guess the average of one single number is: Add it all up, and divide by 1. That's why the average of a single number is the number itself.



Bing

How do you find the average of a number? - Answers

https://math.answers.com/math-and-arithmetic/How_do_you_find_the_average_of_a_number

There's no such thing as the average of a single number. Well, no, technically that's not true. The average of a single number would be the same number. That's why "average" is pretty useless for a single number, and it's never used that way. Average means: You have this bunch of numbers ... two or more ... and they can be all different. You want to find some single number that if every one of the bunch was that number, they would all add up to the same total as they do now. Like, say the bunch of numbers is 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. They all add up to 15. Their average is 3, because if every one of them were 3, they would still add up to 3+3+3+3+3 = 15. How you find the average of a bunch of numbers: Add them all up, and divide the result by how many numbers there are in the bunch. So I guess the average of one single number is: Add it all up, and divide by 1. That's why the average of a single number is the number itself.



DuckDuckGo

https://math.answers.com/math-and-arithmetic/How_do_you_find_the_average_of_a_number

How do you find the average of a number? - Answers

There's no such thing as the average of a single number. Well, no, technically that's not true. The average of a single number would be the same number. That's why "average" is pretty useless for a single number, and it's never used that way. Average means: You have this bunch of numbers ... two or more ... and they can be all different. You want to find some single number that if every one of the bunch was that number, they would all add up to the same total as they do now. Like, say the bunch of numbers is 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. They all add up to 15. Their average is 3, because if every one of them were 3, they would still add up to 3+3+3+3+3 = 15. How you find the average of a bunch of numbers: Add them all up, and divide the result by how many numbers there are in the bunch. So I guess the average of one single number is: Add it all up, and divide by 1. That's why the average of a single number is the number itself.

  • General Meta Tags

    22
    • title
      How do you find the average of a number? - Answers
    • charset
      utf-8
    • Content-Type
      text/html; charset=utf-8
    • viewport
      minimum-scale=1, initial-scale=1, width=device-width, shrink-to-fit=no
    • X-UA-Compatible
      IE=edge,chrome=1
  • Open Graph Meta Tags

    7
    • og:image
      https://st.answers.com/html_test_assets/Answers_Blue.jpeg
    • og:image:width
      900
    • og:image:height
      900
    • og:site_name
      Answers
    • og:description
      There's no such thing as the average of a single number. Well, no, technically that's not true. The average of a single number would be the same number. That's why "average" is pretty useless for a single number, and it's never used that way. Average means: You have this bunch of numbers ... two or more ... and they can be all different. You want to find some single number that if every one of the bunch was that number, they would all add up to the same total as they do now. Like, say the bunch of numbers is 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. They all add up to 15. Their average is 3, because if every one of them were 3, they would still add up to 3+3+3+3+3 = 15. How you find the average of a bunch of numbers: Add them all up, and divide the result by how many numbers there are in the bunch. So I guess the average of one single number is: Add it all up, and divide by 1. That's why the average of a single number is the number itself.
  • Twitter Meta Tags

    1
    • twitter:card
      summary_large_image
  • Link Tags

    16
    • alternate
      https://www.answers.com/feed.rss
    • apple-touch-icon
      /icons/180x180.png
    • canonical
      https://math.answers.com/math-and-arithmetic/How_do_you_find_the_average_of_a_number
    • icon
      /favicon.svg
    • icon
      /icons/16x16.png

Links

58