470
You only need to look at the number of dollars because both values are expressed in the same currency and have the same number of decimal places. When comparing two monetary amounts, the whole dollar amount is the primary factor, and since 5.12 has a greater whole dollar value than 4.82, it is clearly greater. The cents (decimal part) only serve to further differentiate the amounts but do not change the overall comparison.
$4.00
A group of 4 quarters is equivalent to a whole dollar. Each individual quarter is equivalent to 25% or 0.25 or 1/4 of a dollar.
In writing amounts of money, the dollar sign ($) is placed before the numerical amount, with no space in between. For example, one would write "$20" rather than "20$" or "$ 20." If there are cents involved, it is written as "$20.50" to indicate the full amount.
156 mm
Really? whole numbers are like dollar bills. if there is no change then $1.00 can be just $1 a whole number, no decimals, and so can all other total dollar amounts.
Ah, entering a whole dollar amount simply means typing in a number without any cents or decimals. It's like painting with broad strokes and keeping things simple. Just imagine you're painting a happy little tree with a whole number brushstroke.
4 quarters equals a whole dollar
$35,989.56 rounded to the nearest whole dollar is $35,990
19.52 rounded to the nearest whole dollar is 20.
programming
Thousand
To the nearest whole dollar, it is $358.
No- it amounts to 6.7.
yes
You only need to look at the number of dollars because both values are expressed in the same currency and have the same number of decimal places. When comparing two monetary amounts, the whole dollar amount is the primary factor, and since 5.12 has a greater whole dollar value than 4.82, it is clearly greater. The cents (decimal part) only serve to further differentiate the amounts but do not change the overall comparison.
The American dollar symbol, "$", is inserted at the beginning of a price. For example, $34.50.