Leave it as it is because it is already in two decimal places
33.487 is already rounded to three decimal places. if it were 33.4829, which is four decimal places, you would round it to the nearest three DECIMAL places, which would be 33.487. So, the answer to your question is; 33.487 is already rounded to three decimal places.
No, because it is already given to exactly two decimal places.
1.786 rounded to two decimal points would be 1.79
It's already showing 1 decimal place. If you wished to round it to a whole number - you would round up to 4.
0.4887039Three decimal places is up to the second eight, but because the '7' after the second eight is higher than 5, you generally round up, so the second eight would become nine.This would give you your answer of:0.489
33.487 is already rounded to three decimal places. if it were 33.4829, which is four decimal places, you would round it to the nearest three DECIMAL places, which would be 33.487. So, the answer to your question is; 33.487 is already rounded to three decimal places.
You would round it UP - to 0.05
No, because it is already given to exactly two decimal places.
There is a function called ROUND which you can use to round to zero decimal places. If your number was in cell A2, the formula would be:=ROUND(A2,0)
If you round to zero decimal places, you are simply rounding to the nearest whole number. Since the tenths decimal place is less than 5, you would round down and get an answer:256
The answer would be 0.260
1.786 rounded to two decimal points would be 1.79
25.126 = 25.13 rounded to 2 decimal places
you wouldn't round this, it would just be 9.50
You would round it DOWN - to 25.30
Look at the third decimal place. If it is under 5 (as it is in this case), it rounds to .07. If the third decimal place was 5 or higher, it would round to .08.
Press MODE. The second line will say FLOAT and then have the numbers 1-9. If FLOAT is selected, the calculator will not round. If a number is selected, the calculator will round to that number of decimal places. For example, if you wanted to round everything to 3 decimal places, you would select "3". You can also use the round command. To get to it, press MATH, select NUM and the top and choose the second option, "round(". Type the number and then the decimal place you want to round to, separated by a comma. For example, if you wanted to round 2.569 to 2 decimal places, you would type round(2.569,2)