It is: 2/100 = two hundredths
The difference is the PLACE VALUE is the number in standard form and the VALUE is the name of the place spot the number is in.
the answer is go to the left name them and you get 000256.
Hundredths place
Thousands
unless the number is a decimal, the number in the one's place is always the last digit. if you are using a decimal number, the one's place is the last number before the decimal. ex: 5,307 the one's place is 7 546.9 the one's place is 6
The difference is the PLACE VALUE is the number in standard form and the VALUE is the name of the place spot the number is in.
The term "digits value" typically refers to the numerical value represented by a digit in a specific place within a number, such as units, tens, hundreds, etc. In mathematics, it can also relate to the concept of place value, which determines the value of a digit based on its position in a number. For example, in the number 345, the digit 4 has a value of 40 because it is in the tens place.
The place name for the number 1,345,672 is "one million, three hundred forty-five thousand, six hundred seventy-two." The value of each digit in this number is as follows: 1 is in the millions place, 3 is in the hundreds of thousands place, 4 is in the tens of thousands place, 5 is in the thousands place, 6 is in the hundreds place, and 7 is in the tens place, with 2 in the units place.
the answer is go to the left name them and you get 000256.
the value of the place that a digit occupies in a numeral in relation to the decimal point. Examples: Ones, Tens, Hundreds, Tenths, Hundredths, Thousandths.... Each column where a number sits has a place value. In the number 125 the 1 is in the hundreds place value, the 2 is in the tens place value and the 5 is in the ones place value. More complex numbers use place values to the right of the decimal point, for example, 13.456, in this number the 1 is the in the tens, the 3 is in the ones, the 4 is in the tenths, the 5 is in the hundredths, the 6 is in the thousandths. Remember it goes in succession but don't get confused with the right side of the decimal there is no "oneths". The place values go in succession like this but are not limited to this example. Thousands, Hundreds, Tens, Ones (Decimal) Tenths, Hundredths, Thousandths, Ten Thousandths
111,011,111
00000272
Name the place value, and we'll zero in on it.
billionths
Hundredths place
The largest prime number yet discovered has 17,425,170 digits. That does not have a specific name. Perhaps you could come up with one.
There is none. Place values go on forever.