Any rational fraction such that, in its simplest form, the denominator contains a prime factor other than 2 and 5 will be a repeating decimal.
It is an infinite non-repeating decimal which represents an irrational number.
0.353535
you use the decimal that is repeating and out that number twice. examples: .6 repeating= 66 percent 0.9 repeating= 99%
It represents a repeating decimal
For a single repeating digit, it is a dot over the digit.For string of repeating digits, it can be a dot over the first and last repeating digits, or a bar over the repeating string.
Do a division with denominator 11.
The number 0.4141414141 is equivalent to the fraction ( \frac{41}{99} ). This is because the decimal represents a repeating pattern of "41," which can be expressed as a fraction by recognizing it as a repeating decimal.
The decimal 0.428571429 can be expressed as the fraction 3/7. This is because the decimal is a repeating decimal that represents the fraction when simplified. Specifically, 0.428571 is a repeating sequence of the digits 428571, corresponding to the fraction 3/7.
No, 125 is not a repeating decimal. A repeating decimal is a decimal number that has a repeating pattern of digits after the decimal point. In the case of 125, it is a whole number and does not have any decimal places or repeating patterns. It can be written as 125.0000, but it is still a non-repeating decimal.
A non-repeating or terminating decimal is a decimal number that has a finite number of digits after the decimal point, meaning it does not continue indefinitely nor does it have a repeating pattern. An example of such a number is 0.75, which terminates after two decimal places. Other examples include 1.5 and 3.25. In contrast, numbers like 1/3 (0.333...) are repeating decimals and do not qualify.
No, 33 is an integer. 0.3333 repeating is a repeating decimal.
0.45 repeating is a decimal!