Stage 4 · Ratios, Proportion & Percentages

4.6  Sharing by a Ratio, Unit Conversion, and Dimensions

Split a total fairly by counting parts, change units by multiplying by a clever "1," and learn to track the unit as carefully as the number.

For ages 10–12 · Intuition before notation
Knowledge point page

Point 4 of 5 in this lesson: 4.6.4 Quantity, value, and unit: tracking dimensions

4.6.4 Quantity, value, and unit: tracking dimensions

Every measurement is two things glued together: a number and a unit. "3 m" is the number 3 wearing the unit meters. The number alone — just "3" — is meaningless until you say three what. This habit of always carrying the unit is called dimensional sense, and it will quietly catch errors for the rest of your math and science life.

quantity  =  number  ×  unit.

The wonderful part is that units follow the algebra too. When you multiply a quantity by a plain number (a "scalar"), the unit just comes along for the ride:

3 m × 2  =  (3 × 2) m  =  6 m.

But adding is fussier. You can only add quantities that share the same unit — just as you can add 3 apples + 2 apples but not 3 apples + 2 oranges. So 3 m + 2 m = 5 m is fine, but 3 m + 50 cm is a trap: the units don't match. You must first convert to a common unit, then add:

3 m + 50 cm  =  300 cm + 50 cm  =  350 cm  (= 3.5 m).

3 m + 50 cm = ? units don't match — can't add yet convert 3 m → 300 cm 300 cm + 50 cm = 350 cm now the units match ✓
You cannot add unlike units head-on. Convert both to the same unit — here centimeters — and only then add the numbers.
Worked example — units travel through the arithmetic

A shelf needs 4 boards, each 1.2 m long. Total length?
4 × 1.2 m = (4 × 1.2) m = 4.8 m. The unit m rides through untouched — only the number is multiplied.

Never add unlike units

"3 m + 50 cm = 53" is wrong — you added a number of meters to a number of centimeters as if the units were the same. Adding (and subtracting) demands matching units. Multiplying and dividing don't, because there the units transform instead of needing to match (you'll see that next in km/h).

🎮 Try itCombine quantities — and watch the units

Build a quantity as number × unit, then choose an operation. Multiplying by a scalar keeps the unit; adding two quantities only works when the units match — otherwise the widget converts first, then adds.

Operation
number 3 m × scalar 2
eastmath.com · 4.6 Sharing by a Ratio, Unit Conversion, and Dimensions · 4.6.4 Quantity, value, and unit: tracking dimensions