976,543.20
There is no such number. It is always possible to insert a zero immediately after the decimal point to make a number that is one tenth as large (or ten times smaller).
Make the mixed number into an improper fraction and then divide the numerator into the denominator and then move the decimal to the left two places!!!!!!!(:
It is 59.65
a proper fraction, a decimal or a negative number.
1. Make it into a fraction by putting the smaller number on the top. 2. Reduce it. 3. Make it into a decimal. 4. Move the decimal place 2 places to the right. Answer:55%
976,543.20
The reason is because you have to make the number bigger when you multiply. When you move the decimal to the right you make the number bigger, when you move it to the left you make it smaller. Therefore, when you divide you must move the decimal to the left.
A decimal number is simply a way of representing a number in such a way that the place value of each digit is ten times that of the digit to its right. A decimal representation does not require a decimal point. Adding zeros after the decimal point is wrong because they imply a degree of accuracy (significant figures) for which there is no justification.So a whole number is [usually] a decimal number and there is no dependency on decimal places.
When adding or subtracting numbers, the result should have the same number of decimal places as the least number of decimal places in the original numbers. This is because in these operations, you are limited by the least precise measurement. Significance figures don't matter in addition or subtraction, only decimal places.
You have to think about your decimal places. the first decimal place after the point is the tenths, then the hundredths, then the thousandths. So, if your decimal number has two numbers after the point like 0.25, then you have 25/100. Then you make the fraction smaller by dividing both numbers by 25 and you end up with 1/4.
There is no such number. It is always possible to insert a zero immediately after the decimal point to make a number that is one tenth as large (or ten times smaller).
There is a button entitled "increase decimal". Its location depends on the version of Excel you are using.First you must select the cell/s you wish to alter and then press the "increase decimal" button.In Excel 2003 it is on the Formatting toolbar. It has the appearance of a small blue arrow, pointing left and is followed by a decimal point and single zero, overlying a decimal point and a double zero and looks roughly like the following:← .0.00In Excel 2007 the button can be found in the following location: On the Home tab, in the Number group.Please see related links.
Scientific notation is in the form of a x 10^n, where 0
Make the mixed number into an improper fraction and then divide the numerator into the denominator and then move the decimal to the left two places!!!!!!!(:
No, it makes no difference.
You move the decimal 2 places over.