If I had some fractions, I might. But since I don't, I won't.
There are infinitely many different ways to make groups of fractions that sum to 1.
That their sum is always equal to the denominator.
The sum of two fractions will only be a whole number if the fractions have a common denominator. When the denominators are different, the sum will be a fraction with a different denominator, making it impossible to be a whole number. Thus, estimating the sum of two fractions will generally result in a fraction, not a whole number.
infinite number of fractions can have d sum greater than 3 over 4. the condition will be x+y>3 over 4;thus the fractions can be positive or negative andthe answer will be infinite.
the sum the sum
The answer to an addition is called the sum. Fractions and other numbers.
If I had some fractions, I might. But since I don't, I won't.
They will sum to the denominator.
There are infinitely many different ways to make groups of fractions that sum to 1.
The sum of two fractions will be equal to one when the numerator and the denominator of their sum are the same. Example: 1/3 + 2/3 = 3/3 or 1
That their sum is always equal to the denominator.
I have no idea what the "sum" of a fraction means.
A good comparison is the percentage error.
The same way that you calculate the average for any other numbers. Sum the fractions and divide the total by the number of fractions.
The sum of two fractions will only be a whole number if the fractions have a common denominator. When the denominators are different, the sum will be a fraction with a different denominator, making it impossible to be a whole number. Thus, estimating the sum of two fractions will generally result in a fraction, not a whole number.
the answer is 0