5 of 10 shaded would be 1/2 or 0.5 of the total number of squares.
Well, isn't that just a happy little problem to solve! If you have 25 squares in total and 10 of them are shaded, you can find the percentage by dividing the number of shaded squares by the total number of squares, then multiplying by 100. So, 10 divided by 25 equals 0.4, and when you multiply that by 100, you get 40%. Just like that, you've turned a blank canvas into a beautiful calculation!
The answer depends on the size of the squares.
To represent 1.13-1.02 on a hundredths grid, you would first draw 1 whole square to represent the 1 before the decimal point. Next, you would divide the grid into 100 smaller squares to represent the hundredths. You would shade in 13 out of the 100 squares to represent the 0.13 part of 1.13. Then, you would subtract 1.02 by shading in 2 out of the 100 squares to represent the 0.02 part. The difference between the shaded squares for 1.13 and 1.02 would give you the visual representation of the subtraction on the hundredths grid.
To write the number of shaded parts, you count the total number of shaded parts in the figure. To express the fraction of the whole that is shaded, you write the number of shaded parts over the total number of equal parts that make up the whole figure. For example, if there are 3 shaded parts out of a total of 8 equal parts, you would write this as "3/8."
You would format it as Number with 2 decimal places.You would format it as Number with 2 decimal places.You would format it as Number with 2 decimal places.You would format it as Number with 2 decimal places.You would format it as Number with 2 decimal places.You would format it as Number with 2 decimal places.You would format it as Number with 2 decimal places.You would format it as Number with 2 decimal places.You would format it as Number with 2 decimal places.You would format it as Number with 2 decimal places.You would format it as Number with 2 decimal places.
I suppose that would depend on being able to see the shaded parts of the figures.
A decimal square is divided into 100 equal segments to symbolize the parts of one whole. Seventy-five of these segments would be shaded.
A number without a decimal would be a number without a fraction - hence it would be a "whole number".
Only half of the circle would be shaded.
2.63
The digits to the right of the decimal point. Ex: if you are given a number 283.7703, the decimal portion would be 7703.
it is exactly.........7.348469228349534, but to round it would be 7.3