Any digit can be found in the unit's place.
The question has a different answer only with the unjustified/incorrect assumption that a number must be an integer. If the question did say that, then you could not have a zero in the unit's place since then the number would also start with a zero.
However, since there is no reason given why numbersshould be limited to integers, the above example is simply not true and zero CAN be found in the unit's place of a palindromic number: eg in 70.07
the number 9 with a never ending list of nines after it.
No, the proposition is FALSE.
That is correct. Considering the largest double digit whole number is 99. Unless of course, you mean adding the two digits of a double digit number alongside the two digits of another double digit number, then yes, you will have a 4 digit number. Depends how you interpret the question, and your creativity.
You can never reach 0, as it is a converging series, converging at (approaching, but never reaching) 0.
There is no last digit of Pi, (π). It is an irrational number which means it goes on forever.Pi (approx 3.1416) doesn't have a last digit because it is irrational (and coincidentally, transcendental).That means, basically, the decimal form of pi extends infinitely past the decimal point and so you will never get to "the last digit of pi".
the number 9 with a never ending list of nines after it.
No, the proposition is FALSE.
No. When adding the smallest 2 digit number (= 10) to the smallest 2 digit number (again, 10) the result is a 2 digit number (10 + 10 = 20). When adding the largest 2 digit number (= 99) to the largest 2 digit number (again, 99) the result is a 3 digit number (99 + 99 = 198). As you can see, you'll either get a 2 or 3 digit number, but never a 4 digit number.
That is correct. Considering the largest double digit whole number is 99. Unless of course, you mean adding the two digits of a double digit number alongside the two digits of another double digit number, then yes, you will have a 4 digit number. Depends how you interpret the question, and your creativity.
Assuming the question is about positive integers and there are no leading 0s, the answer is NEVER.
Except for 5 itself, the units digit of a prime can't be 5. Any number ending in 5 is divisible by 5.
No the cvn is the 3 digit number on the back of your card. Never give anyone your pin number!!
A decimal number is a way of representing a number in such a way that the place value of each digit is ten times that of the digit to its right. Since that relationship does not apply across the colon symbol used to represent time, the answer is "never".
You can never reach 0, as it is a converging series, converging at (approaching, but never reaching) 0.
Yes it continues and never ends. As almost all of us know nmbers are infinit
There is no last digit of Pi, (π). It is an irrational number which means it goes on forever.Pi (approx 3.1416) doesn't have a last digit because it is irrational (and coincidentally, transcendental).That means, basically, the decimal form of pi extends infinitely past the decimal point and so you will never get to "the last digit of pi".
The square root of 55 is an irrational number, meaning it never ends and doesn't have a repeating digit pattern, so it has an infinite number of digits.