Sara discarded 1/10 of the apples she picked is defective of these apples remaining 300 were made into cider the rest of the shortest fresh fruit. What fraction of the total apples picked were sold as fresh fruit fresh fruit

Im here to help u pookies:

1. How-to books make up 0.3 of the books in the school library. Of these, 0.2 deal with carpentry and 0.4 deal with electronics.
Answer: the portion of the books in the library that are how-to books on electronics

2. Sara discarded 1/10 of the apples she picked as defective. Of the apples remaining, 300 were made into cider.
Answer: not enough information

3. The town of Oak Manor measures 3.8 miles by 4.2 miles. Solve for the total area.
Answer: 15.96 mi2

4. A diver searches for a sunken treasure that is 97.2
feet below the surface.
Answer: −64.8

5. A basketball player is 6 2/3
feet tall. His infant son is 1/4
as tall.
Answer: 1 2/3

If Sara discarded 1/10 of the apples she picked as defective, then the fraction of defective apples is 1/10. Therefore, the fraction of non-defective apples remaining is 1 - 1/10 = 9/10.

Out of these remaining apples, 300 were made into cider, leaving 9/10 * 300 = 270 apples that were sold as fresh fruit.
To find the fraction of the total apples picked that were sold as fresh fruit, we need to know the total number of apples picked.

To find the fraction of the total apples picked that were sold as fresh fruit, we need to determine how many apples were sold as fresh fruit first.

Given that Sara discarded 1/10 of the apples she picked and 300 apples were made into cider, we can find the total number of apples remaining:

Total apples picked = 10/10 - 1/10 = 9/10

From this, we subtract the 300 apples that were made into cider:

Remaining fresh fruit = (9/10) - (300/10) = 6/10 = 3/5

Therefore, 3/5 of the total apples picked were sold as fresh fruit.

To find the fraction of the total apples picked that were sold as fresh fruit, we need to determine the number of fresh apples remaining after Sara discarded the defective ones and made cider.

Let's break down the problem step by step:

1. Sara discarded 1/10 of the apples she picked. This means that 1 - 1/10 = 9/10 of the apples remained.

2. From the remaining apples, 300 were made into cider, which means 9/10 * Total Apples - 300 = Fresh Apples.

3. To find the fraction of fresh fruit out of the total apples picked, we need to calculate (Fresh Apples) / (Total Apples).

Now, since we only have a partial equation, we cannot determine the exact fraction without knowing the actual total number of apples picked. However, we can still explain the process to find the fraction using the given information.