It makes the value of the orginal number larger.
yes. any thing you have on the right side of the decimal point(.) is a decimal:)
why does multiplying numbers by ten move the decimal point to the right
If there are any numbers which are integers and so do not have a decimal point, then append one at the extreme right. Then arrange all the numbers in a column, with their decimal points aligned. Ad up the numbers ignoring the decimal points entirely. In the answer insert a decimal point under the column of decimal points.
To the left of a decimal point are whole numbers. On the right of a decimal point are parts of a whole number.
Thousands - Hundreds - Tens - One - Decimal - Tenth - Hundredth - Thousandth
yes. any thing you have on the right side of the decimal point(.) is a decimal:)
why does multiplying numbers by ten move the decimal point to the right
If there are any numbers which are integers and so do not have a decimal point, then append one at the extreme right. Then arrange all the numbers in a column, with their decimal points aligned. Ad up the numbers ignoring the decimal points entirely. In the answer insert a decimal point under the column of decimal points.
It is a decimal fraction.
To the left of a decimal point are whole numbers. On the right of a decimal point are parts of a whole number.
If you mean the numbers to the right of the decimal point, they comprise the fractional part of the number.
Rounding off means rounding to the nearest integer, thereby eliminating any numbers to the right of the decimal point. If the numbers on the right side of the decimal point are greater than, or equal to 0.5 (e.g. 2.7), then you delete all the numbers to the right of the decimal point and increase the remaining number by one. If they are not greater than, or equal to 0.5 (e.g. 5.1), then you delete all the numbers to the right of the decimal point and leave the remaining number as it is.In the case of 4.99 the numbers to the right of the decimal point are greater than 0.5 so we delete the numbers to the right of the decimal (4.99) then increase the remaining number by one (4+1=5). The answer is 5.
Thousands - Hundreds - Tens - One - Decimal - Tenth - Hundredth - Thousandth
Almost all numbers that we use in daily life are decimal numbers. The place value of each digit is ten times the place value of the digit to its right. And that is all that is required of decimal numbers. A decimal point is not necessary.
You may be thinking of rounding (right of the decimal) or zero suppression (left of the decimal).
No. 8mm can be written as 8.0mm For decimal numbers the numbers on the left hand side of the decimal point are whole numbers and the numbers on the right hand side of the decimal point are parts of numbers, fractions. 0.8 is not a whole number. 8.0 is a whole number so .8 and 8. are not the same
Because left of the decimal point goes times 10 for every position and right of the decimal point goes times -10 for every position.