When describing a ratio, should ratio between or ratio of be used? Example:
The ratio between floor area of smallest rectangle to the enclosed contour area of a polygon is tested with a defined threshold.
The ratio of smallest rectangle's floor area to the enclosed contour area of a polygon is tested with a defined threshold.
tofor representing ratios. @J.R. AFAR, I was explicitly taught(in school time) to use to when referring to ratios. – hjpotter92 Mar 21 '13 at 09:57to, but the form The ratio between A and B is X to Y is not uncommon. Also, when you said you were taught to use "to", now I'm curious – was that in math class, or in English class? (It's not uncommon for something to be common conversationally, but considered erroneous mathematically, such as, "There are an infinite number of them." My math teacher would say, "There are infinitely many of them," and aver those are not the same thing, but my English teacher might ask, "Don't those mean the same?"). – J.R. Mar 21 '13 at 10:23