It is not necessarily possible. The value of any irrational number, for example, can be written approximately as a non-terminating, non-repeating decimal but you cannot know all its digits.
You mean fraction. Fractor isn't a word at all. To convert a repeating decimal to a fraction, first multiply the decimal by 100. Ignore the digits on the right side of the decimal point and keep the number that is on the left side of the decimal point. Divide this number by 99 and simplify if necessary to get the fraction.
all you have to do is take the numerator and divide it by the denominator
All I know is that when a number is negative, you convert the decimal into binary and if it is negative you put 1111 before the binary digits.
Yes. Supposing the decimal terminates after n digits following the decimal point. Then consider the fraction whose numerator is the integer formed from the decimal by removing the decimal point. The denominator is 10n or 1 followed by n 0s. This fraction is equivalent to the terminating decimal.
It is a decimal representation where, after a finite number of digits, all subsequent digits are 0 [or of them all 9].
There are three different situations, corresponding to the three types of decimal numbers: terminating, repeating and those which are neither terminating nor repeating. Terminating: If the decimal number has d digits after the decimal point, then rename it as a fraction whose numerator is the decimal number without the decimal point, and the denominator is 10d or 1 followed by d zeros. For example, 34.567 d = 3 so the denominator is 1000. and the fraction is 34567/1000. Repeating: Until you become expert at this I suggest you do this in two stages (using c and d separately). Suppose there are c digits after the decimal place where the digits are non-repeating, after which you get a repeating pattern of a string of d digits. Then the numerator is the old original string including one lot of the repeated digits minus the original string with none of the repeating digits. The denominator is 10c*(10d - 1), which is a string of d 9s followed by c 0s. For example 123.26159159… There are 2 digits, "26", after the decimal point before the repeats kick in so c = 2, and the repeating string "159" is 3 digits long so d = 3. So the numerator is 12326159 – 12326 = 12313833 and the denominator is 99900 Therefore the fraction is 12313833/99900. Non-terminating and non-repeating: There is no way to get a proper fraction since, by definition, this is an irrational number. The best that you can do is to round it to a suitable number of digits and then treat that answer as a terminating decimal. In all cases, you should check to see if the fraction can be simplified.
The answer depends on what you want to "do" into a fraction or decimal. Not all numbers can be "done" into a fraction.
Any number that can be written as a fraction (with a non-zero denominator) is a rational number; in decimal format it will either terminate (possibly with no digits after the decimal point, ie an integer) or end in a repeating sequence of digits. Any number which cannot be written as a fraction (one integer over another) is an irrational number. If I understand your question correctly: A number written as a fraction with a denominator which does not equal zero can be any of a terminating decimal, a recurring decimal or an integer - they are all possible.
To convert a simple decimal into a fraction, you have to go through three steps. First count the number of digits to the right of the decimal. That number will be the power of ten in the denominator. Then you'll simply place the digits in the numerator over that denominator and you're done. Let's do a few. .4 (0.4) has one digit right of the decimal. That means 101 will be in the denominator. That's 10. Now take the 4 and put it on top, and you have 4/10 for your fraction. .82 has two digits right of the decimal. That means 102 will be in the denominator. That's 100. Put the 82 over the top, and you have 82/100 for your fraction. .603 has three digits right of the decimal. That means 103 will be in the denominator. That's 1000. Put the 603 on top, and you'll have 603/1000 for your fraction. .0075 has four digits right of the decimal. That means 104 will be in the denominator. That's 10000. Put the 75 on top, and you'll have 75/10000 for your fraction. (Note that there are only two digits in the decimal, and that's all we need in the fraction.) put it over a denominator that is used when saying it ex .1= 1 / 10 = one tenth I'm going to assume you mean how; .1 is one tenths 1/10 .01 is one hundredths so 1/100 .001 is one thousandths so 1/1000 .0001 is one ten-thousandths so 1/10,000 and so on
There are three different situations, corresponding to the three types of decimal numbers: terminating, repeating and those which are neither terminating nor repeating.Terminating: If the decimal number has d digits after the decimal point, then rename it as a fraction whose numerator is the decimal number without the decimal point, and the denominator is 10d or 1 followed by d zeros.For example, 34.567d = 3 so the denominator is 1000.and the fraction is 34567/1000.Repeating: Until you become expert at this I suggest you do this in two stages (using c and d separately). Suppose there are c digits after the decimal place where the digits are non-repeating, after which you get a repeating pattern of a string of d digits. Then the numerator is the old original string including one lot of the repeated digits minus the original string with none of the repeating digits. The denominator is 10c*(10d - 1), which is a string of d 9s followed by c 0s.For example123.26159159… There are 2 digits, "26", after the decimal point before the repeats kick in so c = 2, and the repeating string "159" is 3 digits long so d = 3.So the numerator is 12326159 – 12326 = 12313833and the denominator is 99900Therefore the fraction is 12313833/99900.Non-terminating and non-repeating: There is no way to get a proper fraction since, by definition, this is an irrational number. The best that you can do is to round it to a suitable number of digits and then treat that answer as a terminating decimal.In all cases, you should check to see if the fraction can be simplified.
Divide the numerator by the denominator. However, not all fractions terminate, for example 1/7 = 0.1428571428571... with the 6 digits 142857 recurring. With these, an approximation to the fraction can be obtained by rounding the decimal to a number of decimal places - the more places, the more accurate the result.
All its digits are decimal digits so the question makes no sense.