yes
The difference is that rational numbers stay with the same numbers. Like the decimal 1.247247247247... While an irrational number is continuous but does not keep the same numbers. Like the decimal 1.123456789...
Numbers in decimals form cannot be simplified in the same way as rational fractions. Decimal numbers may also indicate precision and that information would be lost if, for example, you simplified 2.50 to 2.5Numbers in decimals form cannot be simplified in the same way as rational fractions. Decimal numbers may also indicate precision and that information would be lost if, for example, you simplified 2.50 to 2.5Numbers in decimals form cannot be simplified in the same way as rational fractions. Decimal numbers may also indicate precision and that information would be lost if, for example, you simplified 2.50 to 2.5Numbers in decimals form cannot be simplified in the same way as rational fractions. Decimal numbers may also indicate precision and that information would be lost if, for example, you simplified 2.50 to 2.5
yes
The set of rational numbers includes the set of natural numbers but they are not the same. All natural numbers are rational, not all rational numbers are natural.
Whole number means the same thing as integer and does not have a fraction or decimal part. Rational numbers can be expressed as a ratio of whole numbers.
Both rational and irrational numbers can be expressed with decimals. If the number is irrational, it will have an infinite number of decimal digits, and there will be no periodic repetition. For example, 1/7 (which is rational) is 0.142857 142857 142857... The same sequence of six digits repeats over and over again. In irrational numbers, this is not the case.
it has the word rational in it
No, they are not.
All numbers with a finite number of decimal digits are rational. Some that infinitely many decimal digits are rational as well. If you mean to repeat the pattern, adding one more "1" every time, then no, it is not rational - rational numbers repeat the SAME sequence of digits over and over (for example, 0.1515151515...), at least eventually (they may start with some digits that are not part of the repeating part, such as 3.87112112112...).
Any fraction with integers in the numerator and in the denominator is a rational number.If you write them as decimals, a rational number will either terminate, or the same group of digits will repeat forever, as in 0.33333... or 2.174646464646...
A decimal is rational if it:either ends and doesn't go on forever; ORit is a repeating decimal.A decimal is irrational if it goes on forever and ever and never stops without repeating.The number: 5.77777777 is rational because it goes on forever, REPEATING the same number (the digit 7).It can also repeat a group of numbers, like the number: 8.789789789789789789See how the "789" is REPEATING over and over again and never stops? That is a rational decimal!
The decimal form of 710 is simply 710. Decimals are a way to represent numbers that are not whole numbers, and in this case, 710 is already a whole number, so its decimal form remains the same. The decimal point is typically placed at the end of a whole number to indicate that there are no tenths, hundredths, or thousandths.