cooking/ measurement
food/ cutting
car racing
clock/ time/dividing time schedule
Yes, we can. And in most cases, they are easier than using mixed fractions.
By using the decimal numbers, you are now using the concept of fraction. There are some situation where we can apply the fraction, for example, cooking, medicine, sewing and tailoring :)
There is no such example. If you cannot use an exact fraction then there will not be an exact decimal that you can use instead. And, if you are using an approximate decimal, you could use an approximate fraction instead.
A half-life fraction is typically represented as a decimal or a percentage that indicates the fraction of a substance that remains after a certain amount of time has passed. For example, if a substance has a half-life of 2 hours and after 2 hours, only half of the original amount remains, the half-life fraction would be 0.5 or 50%.
compare with random fraction to a benchmark fraction. to tell if a fraction is less or greater than another fraction.
Yes, we can. And in most cases, they are easier than using mixed fractions.
By using the decimal numbers, you are now using the concept of fraction. There are some situation where we can apply the fraction, for example, cooking, medicine, sewing and tailoring :)
ok pretend u made a cake and u want to share it with ur family(4 people).what fraction do u have when u cut it for the people and u.
There is no such example. If you cannot use an exact fraction then there will not be an exact decimal that you can use instead. And, if you are using an approximate decimal, you could use an approximate fraction instead.
A half-life fraction is typically represented as a decimal or a percentage that indicates the fraction of a substance that remains after a certain amount of time has passed. For example, if a substance has a half-life of 2 hours and after 2 hours, only half of the original amount remains, the half-life fraction would be 0.5 or 50%.
340 is an integer, not a fraction. But, if you had to write it as a fraction, you could use 340/1.
compare with random fraction to a benchmark fraction. to tell if a fraction is less or greater than another fraction.
You use a reciprical in dividing fractions. 1st you write down the problem. then you flip over the 2nd fraction and multiply the 1st fraction with the second fraction, and there is your answer,
There is no need to do so.
denmitor
Divide the numerator by the denominator.
You need fractions for cooking. You use measuring cups and spoons that are sized exactly so you can add half a cup of flour or half a teaspoon of salt to your recipe.