It is a terminating decimal.
0
The first occurrence of the digit 0 in the digits of pi is at the 32nd decimal place.
Yes, there is a 0 in the decimal representation of π (pi). The value of π is approximately 3.14159, and if you continue to extend its decimal places, you will find that it contains the digit 0 at various points. However, since π is an irrational number, its decimal representation is non-repeating and infinite, meaning the occurrence of digits, including 0, does not follow a fixed pattern.
648
The answer is 3*3*2*1 = 18. If the leading digit is 0 it is not a 4-digit number.
If I understand your question, you want to know the meaning of the phrase "repeating decimal". It just means an infinite decimal expansion (a decimal with infinitely many digits) in which, from some point on, the same digit or group of digits just keeps repeating forever. Every rational number (fraction) has a decimal that either terminates (in which case it can be considered to be a repeating decimal in which the digit 0 keeps repeating; 1/2 = 0.5 = 0.5000000000...) or repeats. An irrational number has a decimal expansion that never repeats. For example, 1/3 = 0.33333333333...; 1/7 = 0.142857142857142857...; 1/30 = 0.03333333333.... and is often represented with a line above the repeating number
If the decimal goes on forever without repeating, the decimal is the representation of an irrational number and cannot be expressed as a fraction. Otherwise: Any number (other then zero) before the decimal point will be the whole number of a mixed number, and the digits after the decimal point represent the fraction. If the decimal terminates, then take the digits after the decimal point and put them over a '1' followed by the same number of '0's as there are digits, and simplify. eg 0.125 has three digits after the decimal point, so put the three digits (123) over a '1' followed by three '0's. that is over '1000' and simplify: 0.125 = 125/1000 = 25/200 = 5/40 = 1/8 If the decimal does not terminate but repeats a sequence of digits, put the repeating digits over the same number of '9's and simplify. eg 0.121212... has two repeating digits (12), so put them over two '9's (99) and simplify: 0.121212... = 12/99 = 4/33 If the decimal starts with a few digits and then repeats, convert the first few digits to a fraction as above (for the terminating decimal) and add the repeating digits converted to a fraction as above, but also follow the '9's of the repeating fraction by the same number of '0's as the initial digits. eg 0.1666... starts with one digit (1) followed by one repeating digit (6): The one non-repeating digit becomes 1/10 (the denominator is '1' followed by one '0'). The one repeating digit becomes 6/90 (the denominator is '9' as there is one repeating digit, followed by one '0' as there was one non-repeating digit). Thus: 0.1666... = 1/10 + 6/90 = 9/90 + 6/90 = 15/90 = 5/30 = 1/6 Another example of this "mixed" non-recurring and recurring decimal: 0.41666... Two non-repeating digits (41) → 41/100 One repeating digit (6) → 6/900 (the one '9' as one repeating digit, two '0's as two non-repeating digits) → 0.41666... = 41/100 + 6/900 = 123/300 + 2/300 = 125/300 = 25/60 = 5/12 Another example of this "mixed" non-recurring and recurring decimal: 0.4181818... One non-repeating digit (4) → 4/10 Two repeating digits (18) → 18/990 (the two '9' as two repeating digits, one '0' as one non-repeating digit) → 0.4181818... = 4/10 + 18/990 = 44/110 + 2/110 = 46/110 = 23/55
0
No, it only repeats if it is 0.'29'
The first occurrence of the digit 0 in the digits of pi is at the 32nd decimal place.
It is 0. As is every digit after the decimal point.
1/3 as a decimal is 0.'3' repeating '3'
1/9 as a decimal is 0.'1' repeating '1'
648
The answer is 3*3*2*1 = 18. If the leading digit is 0 it is not a 4-digit number.
Since 637 is an integer, it is 0.
The digits 0123456789, representing the numbers from 0 to 9, can be found in the decimal representation of pi. However, pi is an irrational number, meaning it has an infinite number of non-repeating digits. Therefore, while these digits do appear in pi, they occur in a seemingly random and unpredictable manner throughout its decimal expansion. As of now, no pattern has been discovered in the distribution of these digits within pi.