مجاني عبر الإنترنتالآلات الحاسبة
Percent Error Calculator
Calculate percent error between an experimental (measured) value and a theoretical (accepted) value. Used in science, chemistry, and physics labs.
percent error calculatorpercentage error calculatorexperimental error calculatorcalculate percent errorpercent error formula
Percent error measures how far off an experimental value is from the theoretical (accepted) value.
الميزات الرئيسية — Percent Error Calculator
Percent error with absolute value (standard)
Signed percent error (shows direction)
Absolute error and relative error
Step-by-step formula breakdown
Handles any positive or negative values
لماذا تستخدم هذه الأداة — Percent Error Calculator
مجاني عبر الإنترنت Percent error calculatorPercentage error calculator — للجميعسريع وسهل Experimental error calculatorCalculate percent error — مجاني 100%مجاني عبر الإنترنت Percent error formula
الخصوصية أولاً
تتم جميع المعالجات في متصفحك. بياناتك لا تغادر جهازك أبدًا.
سريع للغاية
احصل على نتائج فورية بدون وقت انتظار. لا تأخير في الخادم.
يعمل في كل مكان
استخدمه على أي جهاز — كمبيوتر أو جهاز لوحي أو هاتف. لا حاجة لتنزيلات.
الأسئلة الشائعة — Percent Error Calculator
What is percent error?
Percent error measures how far off an experimental measurement is from the accepted (theoretical) value: % Error = |Experimental − Theoretical| / |Theoretical| × 100%. It is always expressed as a percentage and is typically shown as a positive value using absolute value.
What is a good percent error?
Acceptable percent error depends on the field. In chemistry labs: ≤5% is considered good, ≤10% acceptable. In physics experiments: ≤3% is good. In engineering: often ≤1%. Medical measurements may require ≤0.5%. Higher percent error indicates greater inaccuracy or systematic errors in measurement.
What is the difference between percent error, percent difference, and relative error?
Percent error: compares experimental to a known theoretical value. Percent difference: compares two experimental values with no known "correct" answer — uses the average as the denominator. Relative error: the ratio of absolute error to the true value (same as percent error but expressed as a decimal, not a percentage).