Want this question answered?
Almost any calculator can calculate square roots. Have the calculator calculate it. Then round the result to 1 decimal place.
its something about the tenths place after the decimal
I can't say for all calculators, but on my TI calculator, it is the number of digits after the decimal place: type 2.0 enter fix 5 and 2.00000 appears.
second digit to the right of the decimal point.
decimal place
To work this out, you'll need a calculator. Divide 779 by 13 = 0.0166880616 This is the answer as a decimal. To turn this into a percentage, multiply it by 100: 0.166880616 x 100 = 16.6880616%, or 16.7% to 1d.p. (decimal place).
Using a calculator you can find that the square root of 65 is 8.062258. To take this to one decimal place you have to first consider only digits up to one decimal place. In this case that would be 8.0 The next step is to look at the second decimal place and assess if we need to round up. If it is 5, 6, 7, 8 or 9 we round up, otherwise we leave the number as it is (round down). In this case, the second decimal is a 6, so we round up. Therefore, the square root of 65 to 1 decimal place is 8.1
Percent is just hundredths i.e. 5% = 0.05 = 5/100 Move the decimal place two places to the left to convert a percent into a decimal and two places to the right to convert a number into a percent.
32351.2
hundredths place in a decimal is at the second place at the right of the decimal point.
To turn a fraction into a percent, enter the fraction into a calculator. You should get something with a decimal place in. Now multiply this decimal by "100" (imagine the decimal place "hopping" 2 places to the right to mulitply by 100 in your head). You now have your fraction as a percentage. A decimal only has to be multiplied by 100 to turn it into a percentage. Again, imagine the decimal place (the dot) "hopping" two places to the right on the decimal that you have. (One hop to the right is a multiplication of 10, one more hop is a multiplication of 100. You can move the decimal place left to divide by 10's, 100's, and even 1000's etc...).
A good place to rent Canon photo printers in the UK is the official Canon website that allows you to rent Canon photo printers. There are also other businesses that rent Canon photo printers but as most of them are local it's not that convenient.