When rounding to a specific place, take a look at the digit immediately to the right of the target. If that digit is 4 or less, zero everything to the right of the target out. If that digit is 5 through 9, increase the target by one and zero everything to the right of it out. If the target is a 9, increasing it will turn it to zero and increase the digit to the left of the target by one.
0.0498Use your calculator to evaluate e-2. Round your answer to four decimal places and enter it below.0.1353Use your calculator to evaluatee-1. Round your answer to four decimal places and enter it below0.3679
When you go shopping for something you might have to round decimals to find what you have to pay.
You have to get rid of the decimal part, losing part of the number. You can round to the nearest integer (2), you can round down (also 2 in this case), or you can round up (3), depending on your needs.
90% = 0.900 to the nearest thousandth.
just round off the number after the decimal if it is above 5.
6.5- you round it until it has one decimal.
There is no need to round 1097 to any decimal places as there are no digits following a decimal point.
0.938
You can do this in several ways. You can round to the nearest decimal; you can also round up, or round down.
You round it to 27.5
85 rounded to three decimal places is 85.000
round 0.2975 to 1 decimal place = 0.3
round 2.439 to 2 decimal places = 2.44
to round 68.4 to one decimal place = 68.4
In Excel, the second argument of the Round function specifies the number of decimal places to round to. If this number is negative, it rounds to corresponding digits before the decimal point.
To get the decimal, divide the numerator of the fraction by the denominator. If the decimal runs to more than one place, then you have to round it to one decimal place.
You can only round a number to 2 decimal places if it currently has more than 2 decimal places.