GRE Quant Formulas - Cheat Sheet For GRE Preparation
GRE Quant Formulas - Cheat Sheet For GRE Preparation
1. Square
a. Perimeter
P = 4S
o Multiply any one side (s) by four.
b. Area
A = (side)^2
o Multiply any two sides together (i.e., square one side).
2. Rectangle
Perimeter
P = 2(l+w)
o Multiply the length (l) by 2 and the width (w) by 2, and then
add the products together.
b. Area
A = l*w
o Multiply the length by the width.
3. Circle
Perimeter
P = 2πr or πd
o Multiply 2, π (pi), and the radius (r) (the length of a line
connecting the center of the circle to the edge).
o Alternatively, multiply π by the diameter (d) (the length of a
b. Area
A =πr^2
o Square the radius and multiply it by π.
4. Triangle
Pythagorean Theorem
(a)^2 + (b)^2 = c^2
o This theorem can only be used for right triangles
(triangles with a 90-degree angle).
o a and b are the two shorter sides, or “legs,” and c is the
hypotenuse (the longest side of a right triangle).
o Certain triangle-side combinations (a:b:c), called
Pythagorean triples, are easy to memorize. Common ones
you may come across on the GRE are:
3:4:5
5:12:13
8:15:17
Area
A =1/2 bh
o Multiply the base (b) by the height (h) and divide by 2.
o Note: angles in a triangle always add up to 180 degrees.
5. Trapezoid
Area
A = a+b2h
o a and b are parallel sides.
o Add a and b, divide by 2, and then multiply by the height (h).
6. Laws of Exponents
x 0 = 1x -1 =1x, x-2 =1x2, etc
xa xb = xa + bx axb = x(a-b)=1xb-
axaya=(xy)a(xy)a=xaya(xa)b=xab
9. Distance
D =rt
Multiply the rate (r) by the time (t) to find the distance (D).
You can also solve for the time or rate by rearranging this
formula to equal either r or t: R =Dt or t=Dr
y=mx+b
11. Average
average = sum of n numbers/n
average speed = total distance/total time
The average is also called the mean.
Don’t confuse the average for other statistical terms.
Common terms you may see on the GRE test are:
o Mode: the most common number of a data set
o Range: the difference between the highest number and the
lowest number of a data set.
o Median: the middle number of a data set.
12. Probability
Probability of an event occurring = number of successful
outcomes/ total number of possible outcomes.
13. Percentages
Percent Basics
N x 100
Alternatively, a faster way to solve this is by moving the
decimal point of the percent to the left two places and
multiplying it by n. For example, what is 12 percent of 50?
Answer: 50*(12/100) = 6.
Solve for what number n is x percent of:
100 nx
100 nm
Percent Change
Percent Increase
Percent Decrease