After the 10% discount on marked price (P), the selling price is ...
... P×(100% -10%) = 0.90P
After a markup off 35% on cost, the value is
... $70×(100% +35%) = 1.35×$70 = $94.50
The retailer wants these two values to be equal:
... 0.90P = $94.50
... P = $94.50/0.90 = $105.00 . . . . . divide by the coefficient of P
The marked price should be $105.00.
Answer:
The answer is y=1/3x-1
Step-by-step explanation:
m=1/3
y-y=m(x-x1)
y-(-1)=1/3(x-0)
y+1=1/3x-0
-1 -1
y=1/3x-1
Let the null hypothesis be that the agent's claim is correct. Using a standard normal probability table we find:

The p-value 0.14 is much larger than alpha = 0.01, so we cannot reject the agent's claim.
Answer:
in a pile of 1000 colored candies, you'll find 200 of which are blue
Step-by-step explanation:
135 ÷ 27 = 5
ratio: 5:1
1000÷5 = 200
feel free to correct me if I'm wrong