Exactly 28 .
.28
10 digits.
17 bits would allow a value up to 131071.
You would format it as Number with 2 decimal places.You would format it as Number with 2 decimal places.You would format it as Number with 2 decimal places.You would format it as Number with 2 decimal places.You would format it as Number with 2 decimal places.You would format it as Number with 2 decimal places.You would format it as Number with 2 decimal places.You would format it as Number with 2 decimal places.You would format it as Number with 2 decimal places.You would format it as Number with 2 decimal places.You would format it as Number with 2 decimal places.
If the number is before the decimal, it is a whole number. The numbers after the decimal represent fractions of whole numbers. For example if you had to work 8.5 hours, you would work 8 whole hours plus one half hour.
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, for example, 437 is a number in decimal form since7 represents 7 units,3 represent 3 lots of "ten times units" or tens and4 represent 4 lots of "ten times tens" or hundreds.
It can refer to degrees if it is above and slightly to the right. A dot, (not a circle) directly above a number would represent a repeating digit in the decimal representation of a number.
No. A decimal is a way of representing a quantity so that the place value of each digit is ten times the place value of the number to its right. So the opposite would be to find a way not to represent a number?! What is the point of that?
To write 5.06 in word form, you would say "five and six hundredths." This is because the number 5 represents the whole number part, the decimal point separates the whole number from the decimal part, and the numbers after the decimal point represent the fraction of the whole number.
75 is an integer, not a fraction. As a decimal it is 75, exactly as in the question.
On a calculator, 5.09 would typically be displayed as is, with the digits clearly showing the decimal point. If you were to perform operations with it, such as adding or multiplying, the calculator would handle it as a decimal number. Depending on the calculator type, it might also show scientific notation if the number were part of a larger calculation. Overall, it would represent a specific value with two decimal places.
A number without a decimal would be a number without a fraction - hence it would be a "whole number".