A decimal point.
$2.00 2 dollars, or two-hundred cents. $0.02 Point zero-two dollars, or two cents. $0.002 (0.002 dollars) Point zero-zero-two dollars. This has a value of 1/5 of a penny. ---------- 2.00¢ (=0.02 dollars) Two cents (with a redundant .00 for demonstration purposes). 0.2¢ (=0.002 dollars) Point-two cents, so 5 of these would make up one whole cent. 0.02¢ (=0.0002 dollars) Point-zero-two cents, so 50 of these would make up one whole cent. 0.002¢ (=0.00002 dollars) Point-zero-zero-two cents, so 500 of these would be required to make up one single cent.
multiply by 100 so it will be 0.58x100=58 so 0.58 dollars is 58 cents.
the decimal point in money is to separate the dollars from the cents.
just remove the decimal point. For example:$1.28 = 128 cents
When they get their paycheck, their cents are separated from their dollars by a decimal point.
1 dollar = 100 cents 2 dollars = 200 cents 3 dollars = 300 cents . . . 35 dollars = 3,500 cents
Five point two or five and two-tenths. If it's money, it's five dollars twenty cents or five dollars and twenty cents.
6 dollars and 43 cents
There are $17.46 dollars in 1746 cents.
Sweetheart, there are 9 dollars in 900 cents. It's basic math, darling. Just move that decimal point two spots to the left and voilà! You've got your answer.
In the context of money, 3.5 typically refers to 3 dollars and 50 cents. This can also be expressed as $3.50. The decimal point is used to separate the dollars and cents in monetary values.
To write a check for cents, you write the amount in dollars followed by a decimal point and then the cents amount in words. For example, if you want to write a check for 25.50, you would write "Twenty-five dollars and 50/100."