.320 ... to determine a player's batting average, divide the number of at bats into the number of hits.
.271
Batting average = (number of base hits) divided by (number of times at bat) Batting percent = (batting average) times 100.
The percentage is 52 which concludes a .520 batting average.
0.319
The batting average is the percent of times a batter gets a successful hit per official times at bat. It is determined by dividing the hits by the times at bat, i. e. times at bat 10; hits 3. 3 divided by 10 gives you a .300 batting average, or the batter gets a hit 30% of the times he has an official at bat. Base on balls (walks), sacrifice hits, sacrifice flies, hit by pitch ball, and catcher interference do not count as an official at bat.
This is the baseball player's "batting average" and can be by season or career.
Yes, both players have a .320 batting average.
It would still be 300. He will have been at bat 4,010 times and could have as many as 1,210 hits. 1,210/4010 = 30.175% before rounding back to 30%.
401 or .401
batting for average means when you go up to bat. its basically an average of how many hits u get out of how many plate appearances you have
The batter's average would be 280, and after hitting 3 of 4 would increase his average to 284.
Yes, batting averages are ratios. It compares the number of hits a player gets by the number of times he/she has been at bat.