It represents a rational fraction which, in its simplest form, has a denominator with a prime factor other than 2 or 5.
Just divide 15 / 4 on a calculator.
The decimal 0.666666666666... (repeating) appears on calculators due to the way numbers are represented in digital formats. Calculators use a finite number of digits to approximate decimal values, and 0.666... is mathematically equivalent to the fraction 2/3. Because this fraction has a repeating decimal expansion, calculators often truncate or round the repeating digits to fit their display limits, resulting in a representation that might show as 0.66667 or similar, depending on the calculator's settings.
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.
The decimal shows a repeating pattern. Repeating decimals are rational.
No, 33 is an integer. 0.3333 repeating is a repeating decimal.
A non-repeating decimal is a decimal that never repeats itself. For example, pi is a non-repeating decimal.
0.45 repeating is a decimal!
It appears to be a repeating decimal
1.21 repeating ... is a decimal.
3.25 repeating ... is a decimal.
0.7777 repeating is a decimal.
0.370 repeating is a decimal.