Commas are used to separate large numbers into groups of three digits. Each group is called a period.
This answer was found in ACSI ELEMENTARY MATHEMATICS GRADE FIVE, 2001. P. 2.
Period
period
anyone wanna answer,,,here are the answers to pick out of - period, base, exponet. go ahead pick wisley.
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thousand sperater
um.......
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base
66
Commas are used to separate large numbers into groups of three digits. Each group is called a period.
Commas are used to separate large numbers into groups of three digits. Each group is called a period.
If you mean to continue the pattern indefinitely, adding more digits, and one more "1" in every cycle, then it is NOT rational. In the case of a rational number, the EXACT SAME group of digits has to repeat over and over (perhaps after some other, initial, digits), for example:0.45113113113113113... Here, the group of digits "113" repeats over and over, so the number is rational.
It is rational.Any number that has a digit, or group of digits, that repeat forever is rational.
I assume the number is in binary. Separate the binary number from the right, 4 digits at a time: 1011 1011. Then convert each group of four binary digits to hexadecimal. In this case, 1011 is B, so the answer is 0xBB (the prefix 0x is often used to indicate hexadecimal).I assume the number is in binary. Separate the binary number from the right, 4 digits at a time: 1011 1011. Then convert each group of four binary digits to hexadecimal. In this case, 1011 is B, so the answer is 0xBB (the prefix 0x is often used to indicate hexadecimal).I assume the number is in binary. Separate the binary number from the right, 4 digits at a time: 1011 1011. Then convert each group of four binary digits to hexadecimal. In this case, 1011 is B, so the answer is 0xBB (the prefix 0x is often used to indicate hexadecimal).I assume the number is in binary. Separate the binary number from the right, 4 digits at a time: 1011 1011. Then convert each group of four binary digits to hexadecimal. In this case, 1011 is B, so the answer is 0xBB (the prefix 0x is often used to indicate hexadecimal).
its called a period
Commas are used to separate large numbers into groups of three digits. Each group is called a period.
Commas are used to separate large numbers into groups of three digits. Each group is called a period.
They are called "thousands".
In place value, a period is each group of three digits separated by commas in a multidigit number.
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a decimal in which a digit or group of digits repeats without end
Yes.
To make numbers easier to read (so you quickly know how many digits there are), it is customary to separate each group of three digits by some separator. The separator can be a period, a comma, a space, an apostrophe... the rules vary from country to country.
Because it is relatively easy to divide the number into a group of 1 and 3. Much harder to do that with a 16-digit number!
If you mean to continue the pattern indefinitely, adding more digits, and one more "1" in every cycle, then it is NOT rational. In the case of a rational number, the EXACT SAME group of digits has to repeat over and over (perhaps after some other, initial, digits), for example:0.45113113113113113... Here, the group of digits "113" repeats over and over, so the number is rational.