99 cents?
To change any percent into a decimal, multiply the percent by 0.01 (exact); therefore 83 percent = 0.83
an exact decimal must be with the number 0. in it or it is not exact.
There is no "exact". It is infinite.
It is the exact same thing as saying 0200(0.20). To put it in short, the zero is in the 1000th place with no number in front of it. You can put the zero there if you want, but the number value won't change
Your question is too vague.Many countries use the Peso, each which have their own conversion rates:ArgentinaChileColombiaCubaDominican RepublicMexicoPhilippinesUruguayThere are also several different countries and territories using the dollar, again, with their own conversion rates:AustraliaBahamasBelizeBruneiCanadaDominicaEast TimorEcuadorEl SalvadorFijiGrenadaGuyanaHong KongJamaicaKiribatiLiberiaMarshall IslandsFederated States of MicronesiaNamibiaNauruNew ZealandPalauSaint Kitts And NevisSaint LuciaSaint Vincent And The GrenadinesSingaporeSolomon IslandsSurinameTaiwanTrinidad And TobagoTuvaluUnited States of AmericaZimbabweFeel free to re-ask your question giving the exact country for both the Peso and Dollar.
You can always have exact change for a dollar by carrying a combination of coins totaling 100 cents. For example, you can carry four quarters, ten dimes, twenty nickels, or one hundred pennies to ensure you always have exact change for a dollar.
A half dollar and five pennies
According to an e-mail from the New Jersey Turnpike Authority, which oversees the Garden State Parkway, dollar coins are accepted in the Parkway's exact change lanes.
99 pennies If you require all four coins then 62 coins can add up to 99 cents: 1 quarter, 1 dime, 1 nickel, and 59 pennies
The exact number cannot be tallied. At several different points in history, the US Treasury - specifically the Mint - had recovered older silver dollars and melted them down to make newer ones. Too, not all dollar coins struck were in fact issued. Some coins which had not been issued due to over-production were destroyed. Since the numbers of such coins were never specified, it is impossible to know just how many surviving dollar coins are in circulation, or collections, at this time.
The coins are valued at a price ranging from $25 to $50. The exact price will depend upon the condition of the coin.
4 dimes, 1 nickel & 5 pennies
You can find one stamped on the coins minted for Panama. They use dollars but call them "Balboas". They actually use coins minted by the US mint in the exact same sizes and denominations as American coins and most denominations of the coins show an image of Balboa on them.
If you allow a 50 cent piece, the answer is 9. Otherwise it's 10. The coins would be either: a half dollar, a quarter, two dimes, a nickel, four pennies or: three quarters, two dimes, a nickel, four pennies. Incidentally, if you want the minimum number of denominations for making exact change up to $100.00, that would be: A fifty, Two twenties, A ten, A five, Four dollar bills, Three quarters, Two dimes, A nickel and Four pennies, giving you a grand total of nineteen coins/bills.
11
The coins are worth a price ranging from $50 to $100. The exact price will depend upon where you get the coin and its condition.
The exact mintage number for 1890-S Morgan dollars was 8,230,373. However, there is no specific count for the number of them that still exist.