If 750 men require 22,500 rations of bread for a month; how many rations will a garrison of 1200 men require? (Charles Hutton, A course of mathematics for the use of academies as well as private tuition, 4th American ed., vol. 1, p. 46, New York, 1825.)Such problems were set up as proportions, i.e.
750 : 22,500 :: 1200 : ?Each of the four quantities (three known and one to be calculated) is called a term. The expression can be read
'750 men is to 22,500 rations of bread as 1200 men is to how many rations of bread?'To calculate the last term, Hutton has one multiply the two middle terms and then divide the result by the first term:
This method of solving proportion problems was common in Hutton's day, when it was known as the Rule of Three. As Abraham Lincoln says of his own education,
To 'cipher' is do arithmetic, using the familiar Hindu-Arabic number system.Of course when I came of age I did not know much. Still somehow, I could read, write, and cipher to the Rule of Three; but that was all. I have not been to school since. The little advance I now have upon this store of education, I have picked up from time to time under the pressure of necessity. (Letter, accompanying his Autobiography, to Jesse Fell, Dec. 20, 1859.)
In more recent times, this problem might be set up
where we have used quantities convention used in public by physicists, engineers, chemists and other technical people, rather than the numbers(-only) convention used mathematics and scribbled calculation.
One isolates through a series of steps. One can multiply both sides by , giving
Dividing both sides by gives
Multiplying both sides by then gives
So far, this is bookwork---useful, but perhaps a little boring. It is essential background, however, to dealing with proportion tables, our next object of concern.