Yes. It will add either the dollar signs or whatever the local currency being used in the country the person is using, and two decimal places.
Converts a dollar price expressed as a decimal number into a dollar price expressed as fraction. For example, Dollar in Decimal Number is 1.25, Fraction is 32, the Dollar in Fraction will be 1.08.
Currency format: ......$12.00 (dollar sign next to number) Accounting format: $......12.00 (dollar sign at left margin of cell)
Quarters are 0.25 of a dollar.
If you have a decimal, it means you have a portion of a number, not a whole number. For example, if you have $2.10, you have two whole dollars, but the ten cents are only a portion of a dollar (and notice, they are a "decimal" -- .10).
They are alike because you can think as a decimal number as money so the decimal can be thought as that to.HOPE I HELPED!
A decimal number is simply a way of representing a number in such a way that the place value of each digit is ten times that of the digit to its right. A decimal representation does not require a decimal point. So, the answer is XXD92100 where XXD is the ISO 4217 currency code: for example, AUD for Australian dollar, BBD for Barbados Dollar, BMD for Bermuda dollar, all the way to ZWD for Zimbabwe dollar.
same percentage of a dollar or 100
There are a few very good reasons why a dollar has a serial number on it. One reason is so that it can be tracked for accounting purposes. It also serves as an anti-counterfeiting measure.
The first number after the decimal is 5 or above, so the dollar amount would be rounded up. The answer is $85.00.
OK, SO $12.60 rounded up to the nearest dollar is $13. This is because if the decimal place on this is above or is .50, then you round up to the nearest dollar. If the decimal following the number is lower than .50 you just cross out the decimal, so 12.49 rounded is 12, but 12.50 is 13. By rounding, I mean getting rid of the decimal and adding 1 to the number, so 12.60, get rid of the decimal, so 12, and then add the one that that decimal means: so $13. Hope this helps!
Well, isn't that a happy little question! The decimal of 3.9 is simply 3.9. You see, when we have a number like 3.9, the whole number is 3 and the decimal part is .9. It's just like a little friend tagging along with the whole number, bringing a touch of uniqueness to the party.
The dollar is assumed to be a finite entity.