Right most 5 (after the decimal) has a place value of 5/100 3 (after the decimal) has a place value of 3/10 Left most 5 (before the decimal) has a value of 5
8/3 = 2 2/3 = 2.66666666666666666666666666666666666666666666666667
3 is in hundredths place.
2 in decimal form is 2. You can add as many zeros after the decimal as you want. It does not change the value of two. Meh, or 2.0!
It is: pi = 3.14 in two decimal places
0.845 has the greatest value, because the first digit after the decimal point, eight, has greater value than 3, 2, and 5. The first number after the decimal point determines the value of the number as opposed to other decimal numbers.
Right most 5 (after the decimal) has a place value of 5/100 3 (after the decimal) has a place value of 3/10 Left most 5 (before the decimal) has a value of 5
non examples of like fractions = fractions that are not equal in value to other fractions. For example: 1/2 and 3/4. 1/2=.5 and 3/4=.75 since .5 does not equal .75, then 1/2 & 3/4 are not "like fractions" (see below for a summary of like fractions). Additional Info.: Like fraction examples: 1/2 & 2/4 (both fractions = the decimal value .5) 1/8 & 3/24 (both fractions = the decimal value .125) A "like fraction" is a fraction that has the same decimal value as another fraction. For example: 1/2 and 2/4 both = the decimal value .5 The easiest way to create a like fraction is to use a fraction that has a decimal value of 1. Simply multiple it times another fraction to create a like fraction. For example: Using 2/2 (which = decimal value 1), you get 2/4 as follows: 2/2 * 1/2 = 2/4 = .5 Note: 2/2 is used to create the "like fraction" 2/4. 2/4 and 1/2 are the "like fractions" because they both = the decimal value .5 You can use any fraction that is = to decimal value 1, for example: 200/200 * 1/2 = 200/400 = .5 200/400 & 1/2 are the "like fractions" that both have a .5 decimal value. You should remember this fact because it is used frequently in algebra and higher math.
The answer is 230/3, which is 76 2/3, or as a decimal value of 76.66666... (infinitely repeating).
What is the place value of 3 in 2.35
Repeatedly divide the decimal value by 2 and take the remainder (which can only be 0 or 1) until the decimal value is 0. The first remainder is the low-order bit, thus we work through the bits in increasing order of magnitude. For example, decimal value 50: 50 / 2 = 25 r 0 25 / 2 = 12 r 1 12 / 2 = 6 r 0 6 / 2 = 3 r 0 3 / 2 = 1 r 1 1 / 2 = 0 r 1 Thus 50 decimal is 110010 in binary.
No. A decimal is a representation of a number such that the place value of any digit is ten times the place value of the digit to its right. It does not require a decimal point. So the decimal numbers, 3 and 4, can be multiplied together to give 1100 in binary.
The number of digits to the right of the decimal point, referring to the 10-powers of the fraction. e.g.: 3.142 is the value of pi to 3 decimal places, and can be analysed as. It is 3 + (1 X 101) + (4 x 10-2) + (2 x 10-3) or in words 3 + (1 tenth) +(4 hundredths) + (2 thousandths).
2/3 = 2 ÷ 3 = 0.6667 in decimal
It is the amount obtained when you divide the decimal number by 2.
3 is in hundredths place.
0.5 is the only decimal that will qualify as a decimal value for 1/2