There are infinitely many. But, thanks to the strange behaviour of infinities, it set of fractions between 0 and 1 has the same cardinality (size) as the set of fractions between 0 and 100, or 0 and 10000000.
0% as a fraction = 0/1
As a fraction, we can express 'em as: 0 = 0/2 = 0/3, which is the trivial fraction 10 = 10/1, which is the improper fraction.
3 equivalent fraction for 0 = 0/1, 0/2, 0/3,...
A fraction (not faction) with an absolute value of at least 1 is an improper fraction. One whose absolute value is in (0, 1) is a proper fraction.
The primary answer is 0/1. However, you can multiply the numerator and denominator of the primary answer by any non-zero integer to obtain an equivalent fraction. If the selected integer is n, the equivalent fraction will be (0*n)/(1/n) = 0/n. Thus any number of the form 0/n is a fraction equivalent to 0.
If you are asking how many different fractions lie in this range the answer is an infinite amount. If you are asking what fraction lies in the center it is 1/2
0% as a fraction = 0/1
As a fraction, we can express 'em as: 0 = 0/2 = 0/3, which is the trivial fraction 10 = 10/1, which is the improper fraction.
There are infinitely many fractions and decimals between 0 and 1.
There is no fraction between 0 and 1 which is also between 1 and 2.
There are infinitely many of them. -1/3 is one example.
3 equivalent fraction for 0 = 0/1, 0/2, 0/3,...
Any number that can be expressed as a fraction is rational and there are plenty of fractions from -1 to 0
It is 1.5 and as an improper fraction it is 3/2
there is no fraction
no
Because the probability of an impossible event is 0 and probability lies within the area of {0-1} meaning 0 is impossible and 1 is definite. If you took an improper fraction such as 5/4 and made it a proper faction, it would be 1 1/4 making it more than 1 or (100%) and that wouldn't make any sense because 4/4 (1) is definite, anything more isn't a probability.