Nine billion, eight hundred seventy-six million, five hundred forty-three thousand, two hundred ten
What place value is 4
Each position has a place-value that is 10 times as much as the position that is one to the right of it; or 1/10 as much as the position that is one to the left of it.The starting point is that the right-most digit in a whole number, or of the whole part in a number with decimals, has a place-value of 1.
The 0, in the tens' place has a value of 0. The digit 1 is in the thousandths' place - a much smaller place value but, its value is 1 times a thousandth, which is bigger than 0.
it means adding that much more value to the original number
zero is infact a number not a placeholder contrary to popular belief. many people may argue that zero is the bridge between the positives and the negatives upon the infinite number line. However Zero has a value just as any other number on the number line. zero has a value of zero. this is not an absess of value but the very much real value of zero. if a certain representation has a value on the number line it must therefore be a number. the socalled bridge between the positive and negative numbers is the line upon which all numbers of infinite value are settled.
Expanded Form is a way to break up a number to show how much each digit in the number represents. In other words, expanded form is the method of pulling a number apart and expressing it as a sum of the values of each digit.The best way to identify the expanded form of a number is to simply write the number in words.Examples of Expanded FormExpanded form of whole numbersIn order to understand expanded form better, one needs to be good at place value.Consider the number 543. Arrange the digits in a place value chart as shown below.From the chart above, we see that:the value of 5 is 5 × 100 = 500the value of 4 is 4 × 10 = 40the value of 3 is 3 × 1 = 3Therefore, the expanded form of the number 543 is 500 + 40 + 3.
Its place value.
The answer depends on A. If it is a number in which the place value of each digit is ten times the place value of the digit to its right then the number is the decimal.
What is it called to replace a number that tells about how many or how much
the value of a number is how much a number is worth
Each position has a place-value that is 10 times as much as the position that is one to the right of it; or 1/10 as much as the position that is one to the left of it.The starting point is that the right-most digit in a whole number, or of the whole part in a number with decimals, has a place-value of 1.
If the digit in the thousands place is increased by 1, the value of the number is increased by 1,000.
The place value of the digit 6 in 0.68 is one tenth. So the 6 in 0.068 is 0.6 times the place value of the 6 in 0.68.
I assume you mean "binary digits". The normal numbers we use are base-ten, using ten different digits (0-9). Also, each place-value is worth ten times as much as the place-value to the right of it. Binary numbers follow a similar principle, but are based on the number 2. That is, there are only two digits (0 and 1), and each place-value is worth twice as much as the number to the right.
The value of a digit in a number is the face value of the digit multiplied by its place value. In the decimal system, the value of the digit immediately to the left of the decimal point is units so that its numeric value is the face value of that digit. The place value of any other digits is ten times the place value of the digit to its right - or one tenth of the digit to its left.In the binary system, the place value goes up in multiples of 2, in the octal system in powers of 8 and in hexadecimal in 16s. There are also number systems based on other bases.
It determines how much that digit is worth. See this article on place value. http://www.aaamath.com/plc.htm
Expanded Notation is the technique of writing out a number by place value sections. A place value section is how much each digit is worth. For example, in 4.79, the place value sections are- Four stands for 4, seven stands for seven tenths, and nine stands for nine hundredths. Expanded notation form would be 4 + .7 + .09. It is a form of writing it out by place value sections.
1.27 rounded by the tens place is not possible. This is because the number is too small and does not even have a tens place value. If you did it by tenths for decimals it would be: 1.3