It depends on the degree to which the number is being rounded.
To the nearest
Unit: 9250
Ten: 9250
Hundred: 9200
Thousand: 9000
Ten thousand: 10000
Hundred thousand (or bigger): 0
Yes. It does not have to be an exact value.
60000
By adding simple logic you can round off to single digit. In any value you add 0.05 and pick only one digit after the decimal and the result will be the value after rounding off in one decimal place.
9250
Round off to the nearest cent, means round off to the nearest hundredths or round off to two decimal.
The digit in the hundreds place is 2, and the digit on the tens place is 5, which is on right of 2. Since 5 is at least 5, we round up the value to get 9300.
I would suggest 9200 * 30 = 9000*30 + 200*30 = 270000 + 6000 = 276000.
£9250 is $11,225
9250 is between zero and ten thousand. It is closer to ten thousand than it is to zero. 9250 to the nearest thousand is 9000. 9250 to the nearest ten thousand is 10000.
To round off to the nearest integer... double a = {some value}; a = (int) (a + 0.5); To round off to the nearest hundredth... double a = {some value}; a = (int) (a * 100. + 0.5) / 100.; These are just two examples.
9250 meters are 9.25 kilometers.
Rounded value is 5.
Yes. It does not have to be an exact value.
ahm
60000
No because it is an absolute value
Name the place value, and we'll zero in on it.