It could be that the decimal representation terminates so that the number is a rational number or that there is an infinitely long non-recurring sequence which indicates that the number is irrational.
A repeated decimal is a decimal representation of a number in which, following a finite string of digits, the decimal digits settles into a string which repeats itself again and again - forever. For example, 111.11/77 = 1.44298701298701... The repeating pattern 298701 appears after the first three digits of the decimal representation.
Assuming that you mean a digit, it is a terminating decimal.
Do you mean 121 or 132?
It means repeat that decimal forever with it's last digit.
A decimal number is simply 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. If it does not contain a fractional part then the decimal representation does not require a decimal point.
Well, honey, the largest 12-digit number with repeated digits allowed is 9,999,999,999,999. I mean, unless you want to get fancy and start throwing in letters or emojis, but I doubt that's what you're looking for. So there you have it, the biggest 12-digit number you can get with the same digit repeated over and over again.
A decimal number is simply 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. It may or may not contain a fractional part. If not, the decimal representation does not require a decimal point.
The tens digit is the digit in the last but one place before (to the left of) the decimal point of a fraction or the end of an integer.
No, a sequence does not necessarily imply repetition. A sequence is a particular order in which related elements follow each other, but they do not have to be repeated. Each element in a sequence is unique and follows a specific pattern or rule.
A decimal is simply a way of representing a number so that the place value of any digit is ten times the place value of the digit to its right. So 1 is a decimal number and therefore 1 pint would be a decimal pint.
It depends on what you mean by three digit decimal. If you mean three digits after the decimal, then it's 0.999. However, if you mean three digits in the number, then it's 0.99.
There are no recurring patterns since pi is an irrational number. If there was a recurruing pattern, pi would be a rational number (it could be expressed exactly as a fraction).If you mean are there any repeated patterns in pi, logically there have to be.Take any digit - let's say 3. Whenever 3 occurs in the decimal expansion of pi it must be followed by another digit. There are ten possible digits, and when these have been exhausted, one of them must be repeated. So there will be a two-digit repeted pattern. Because pi never terminates, any given two-digit patterns will occur again and again and must be followed by another digit each time, so there will be three-digit repeated patterns. And so on and on.There will (eventually) be repeated patterns of any length you choose - repeated hundred-digit patterns, or thousand-digit ones, or million-digit ones. You'll have to search a long, long way to find them, though! In the first 4 billion digits of pi there don't appear to be any repeating patterns longer than 10 digits.