But, as you add materials to water, it expands or contracts. This is confusing to many.
You can make g/g or what is called weight / weight solutions to make up something or you can use g/v or weight / volume. The former says weight out 5 g of x and add to water to make 100 g of total solution and this is w/w. OTOH, g/v suggests using 5 g of x and adding water to make 100 ml of solution. This is a very subtle difference that becomes greater as percentage goes up or if the reaction generates or absorbs heat.
Then there is the school that uses g/g in this sense, 5 g of x and 100 g of water. This uses a method called "molal" which varies from compound to compound and really is not good.
If you measure viscous liquids such as HC110, you should use g/g, another method. In this you take 5 g of HC110 and add water up to 100 g as one example.
And 1 cc of water is 1 gram of water only at 20C.
PE