"Version I.I" would be one method of doing so.
Bear in mind that "v1.1" is not a number as such. The "v" is an abbreviation of the word "version", but the "1.1" portion is not regarded as a floating point number like "one-and-one-tenth". The first number is the major version and the second number is the minor version. The period simply separates the major from the minor.
To understand the difference, bear in mind that in version numbers, v1.11 would come after v1.2 (because minor version 11 is newer than minor version 2). Whereas the decimal value 1.11 would come before decimal value 1.2 (because 1.11 is smaller than 1.2).
Thus, to represent "v1.1" using Roman numerals, you would need to treat the major and minor version separately, and avoid using "v" as an abbreviation (because V is 5 in Roman numerals).
The Roman numeral of VII is equivalent to 7
V11
It looks like the Roman numeral for 7
It is actually VII rather than V11. It means 7. V=5 and I=1.
VII is the Roman numeral for 7IV is the Roman numeral for 4
The Roman numeral of VII is equivalent to 7
V11
It looks like the Roman numeral for 7
It is actually VII rather than V11. It means 7. V=5 and I=1.
VII is the Roman numeral for 7IV is the Roman numeral for 4
If you mean VII then it is a Roman numeral equivalent to 7
In Roman numerals, V represents the number 5. When a smaller numeral appears before a larger one, it is subtracted from the larger numeral. Therefore, V11 would be interpreted as 5 (V) + 1 (I) + 1 (I), which equals 7 in standard Arabic numerals.
VII = 7In the UK it is a form to tax your carIt is an Italian motor bike, Motor Guzzi V11There is a V11 helicopterIt6 all depends on what you mean by the question, needs clarification
soccer
The number that represents ILX is Fifty-nine (Aka 59).
yes he did
no she did not