Yes
Yup
a decimal point
No its not a whole number, it has a decimal at the end.
You can add or subtract it as a whole number. If you must use its decimal form, you just stick a decimal point at the end the whole number!
If it is an integer than yes. A whole number for example: 5, 6000, even 1 million. A non-whole number would be 5.5, 6000.3, 1,000,000.09; anything with a decimal or fraction at the end.
To write a decimal you go to the end of the whole number 5 for example and then you put a period (5.) then you add the rest of the decimal like 5.6
Only if the other number is not a whole number but has a decimal.
To convert a whole number to a decimal, place a decimal point at the end and place a zero.15 -> 15.0125 -> 125.01454874 -> 1454874.0
At the right-hand end of it. It's usually not written with a whole number, since there won't be any digits after it.
If its a fraction such as 3/4 then divide the denominator into the numerator which as a decimal is 0.75 but if its a whole number such as 15 then simply add .0 to the end of it and so 15 as a decimal is 15.0
front end estimation means to use only the whole number part of the decimal. we only use whole numbers to do front end estimation
1.0, 2.0, 3.0, 4.0, 5.0, etc. etc.Assuming you mean a whole number rather than a hole number, you do not need to do anything.A decimal version of a number is simply a way of expressing it in a form in which the place value of each digit is ten times that of the digit to its right. That is all a decimal is: no need for a decimal point or any 0s or anything else.So, for example, 67 is the decimal equivalent for sixty seven.