It is its positional place value
sum
It is its positional place value within a number
8th digit in VIN
The value of each digit in a number is determined by its position, known as its place value. In the decimal system, for example, the rightmost digit represents units (ones), the next digit to the left represents tens, then hundreds, thousands, and so on. Each position is a power of ten, where each step to the left increases the value by a factor of ten. Therefore, the same digit can have different values depending on its location within the number.
Hey mate what is your 7 digit casting number??????????????
Well, honey, let me break it down for you. When you multiply a 4-digit number (ranging from 1000 to 9999) by a 1-digit number (ranging from 0 to 9), the result can be a 3-digit number (ranging from 0 to 8991). So no, the product of a 4-digit number and a 1-digit number is not always a 5-digit number. Math doesn't discriminate, darling.
Divide the two-digit number by the one-digit number. If the remainder is zero then the 2-digit number is a multiple and if not, it is not.
A decimal number is simply a representation of a number such that the place value of each digit is ten times the place value of the digit to its right. It gives no information as to the location of the decimal point and so the number of decimal places.
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.
To determine if a two-digit number is a multiple of a one-digit number, you can divide the two-digit number by the one-digit number. If the result is an integer (with no remainder), then the two-digit number is a multiple of the one-digit number. Alternatively, you can check if the two-digit number ends in a digit that confirms divisibility by the one-digit number (for example, even numbers for 2, ending in 0 or 5 for 5, etc.).
No.
A double digit number, triple digit number........