A number cannot have a place value: only a single digit in a number has a place value.
Its face value is 1 but its place value is 10
Each place has a value 10 times the value of the place to its right.
The place value is 10 thousand
Place value = 10 Face value = 2 Product = 20.
That is the tens place, so it has a value of 3*10=30.
A number such as the one you wrote doesn't have a "place-value"; the concept of "place-value" applies to each of the digits. The right-most digit has a place-value of 1, the second digit (from the right) has a place-value of 10, the third one has a place-value of 100 (10 squared), the next one has a place-value of 1000 (10 cubed), etc.
Its face value is 1 but its place value is 10
Each place has a value 10 times the value of the place to its right.
The place value of 8 = 8 * 100 = 800. The place value of 1 = 1 * 10 = 10. The place value of 2 = 2 * 1 = 2. The solution above and all other place value
The place value of the 0 is the ones, the place values of the 6 is tens, the place value of the 5 is hundreds, the place value of the 8 is thousands. So you start with 1, then the next digit from the right will be 1*10 = 10, then the third digit from the right is 10*10 = 100. Hope this helps.
The place value of a decimeter is 1/10 of a meter. It is equivalent to 10 centimeters or 100 millimeters.
The place value is 10 thousand
The tens place of 202,416 is 1. Its value is 10.
Place value = 10 Face value = 2 Product = 20.
Why is 10 important in our place value system
The place value is a millionth (or 10-6)
Its positional place value is 8/10 = eight tenths