"You have to count the spaces to the right to know how many spaces you have to put."
You can multiply any numbers together.
To multiply decimal numbers, the decimal point is ignored and the multiplication is done as though they were (large) integers. The last step is to put the decimal point into the answer by ensuring the same number of digits follow it as were following the decimal points in the numbers multiplied together; trailing zeros can be removed at this point.
multiply the numerators (top numbers) together then multiply the denominators (lower numbers) together
Two numbers that you can multiply together to get 72 are: 36 and 2.
the product will have four decimal places
4
When multiplying a whole number by a decimal with two places, ignore the decimal point and multiply as if you were multiplying two whole numbers. After you get the answer, re-insert the decimal point so that the product has two decimal places.
You multiply the numbers like you multiply integers. Count how many numbers are after the decimal points in both numbers combined and move the decimal point in front of the answer.
You can multiply any numbers together.
line up the numbers and decimals multiply regularly then bring the decimal down
Pretend there are no decimal points, and multiply the numbers together. Then count over (from the right) the number of decimal points of the two numbers combined. For example: 3.4 * 0.185 = 0.6290 34 * 185 = 6290. There is one number to the right of the decimal point in 3.4, and three to the right in 0.185. One plus three is four, so starting from 6290. you move over four places.
To multiply two digit decimal numbers, multiply the numbers as you would without the decimals. To put the decimal in the answer, count the number of decimal places in the two numbers and put the decimal in the answer that many places to the left. For example: 5.12 x 6.35 = 32.5120. If the numbers were 51.2 x 63.5, the answer would be 3251.20.
The numbers are: -0.49 and -24.51 rounded to 2 decimal places
No.When you multiply two negative numbers together, you do not get a negative number as the answer.
To multiply decimal numbers, the decimal point is ignored and the multiplication is done as though they were (large) integers. The last step is to put the decimal point into the answer by ensuring the same number of digits follow it as were following the decimal points in the numbers multiplied together; trailing zeros can be removed at this point.
The answer depends on the decimal numbers: there is no simple answer if one (or both) of the decimals is a non-terminating number.
multiply the numerators (top numbers) together then multiply the denominators (lower numbers) together