Yes, unless it is an infinite, non-recurring number.
The denominator of the fraction is determined by the number of decimal places in the decimal number. If there is one decimal place, the denominator will be 10. If there are two decimal places, the denominator will be 100, and so on.
For 0.4279, the denominator would be 10000.
by dividing the denominator from the numerator .
Count the number of digits after the decimal point. The denominator is 1 followed by the same number of 0s.So, for example, 12.0356 has 4 digits after the decimal place. Therefore the denominator is 10000, and the rational form is 120356/10000
Divide the denominator into the numerator.
by dividing the numerator by the denominator
Other way around. To get the decimal equivalent of any fraction, divide the numerator by the denominator. Sometimes the decimal is recurring and sometimes it's not.
you divide the numerator by the denominator on you will get a decimal and you write it 00.00 that is a decimal
Complex fraction Complex fraction - A complex fraction is a fraction where the numerator and/or denominator are a fraction. Decimal - A decimal is a number based on the number 10. It can be thought of as a special type of fraction where the denominator is a power of 10. Decimal point - A period or dot that is part of a decimal number.
No. Divide the numerator by the denominator.
To convert a fraction to a decimal, divide the denominator into the numerator.
Any number that can be written as a fraction (with a non-zero denominator) is a rational number; in decimal format it will either terminate (possibly with no digits after the decimal point, ie an integer) or end in a repeating sequence of digits. Any number which cannot be written as a fraction (one integer over another) is an irrational number. If I understand your question correctly: A number written as a fraction with a denominator which does not equal zero can be any of a terminating decimal, a recurring decimal or an integer - they are all possible.