The exact value is an irrational number, and can't be written on paper with digits.0.34202 is less than 0.000042 percent wrong.Cos(70 deg) is an irrational number and it is impossible to give its exact value.
1/squareroot2 ummm, yes, but be aware that square root 2 is an irrational number that has *no* exact value. So your question cannot be answered in the terms you asked it. You can use a calculator to get as much precision as you want, but never an *exact* answer.
The radical answer is sqrt(3)/2. (0.86602540378443864676372317075294)
275 and 250 = 275 + 250 = 525 exactly.
The answer is irrational and the only way to give an exact value is to give it as 13200*sqrt(6) ft.
-- end of the universe -- the day you will die -- the exact value of 'pi' -- the exact value of ' e ' -- the exact value of sqrt(2) -- the exact value of any other irrational number
Approximate value, is a value that is not necessarily the right answer but, it is the closest one to it.It means that it isn't exact - but close to the exact value.
The exact value of sin 22.5 is 0.382683432
There is an exact value - we just can't write it in numbers.
Some value / exact value x 100 = percentage
3, -3 4, -4 these numbers all have the same "exact value" 3, -5 do not have the same exact value. exact value is how many s[pots away from 0 it is
The exact value is 0.5*sqrt(3)
(f) What is the exact value (in decimal) of giga?
Yes, you could if you knew the exact value for pi as well as the diameter of the circle. Multiply the diameter by the exact value for pi to get the circumference. However, it is impossible because the exact value for pi is not known. It is only known to about a trillion decimal places, but the exact value is not known.
Approximate value, is a value that is not necessarily the right answer but, it is the closest one to it.It means that it isn't exact - but close to the exact value.
4 is the glyph for the fourth of our counting numbers. This is also considered its exact value.
The exact value of 150 would be 3/2. This is taught in high math.