There are infinitely many. But, thanks to the strange behaviour of infinities, it set of fractions between 0 and 1 has the same cardinality (size) as the set of fractions between 0 and 100, or 0 and 10000000.
0% as a fraction = 0/1
Oh, dude, you're hitting me with the easy math questions, huh? Alright, so 0 as a fraction is just 0/1 because anything divided by 1 is itself. And 10 as a fraction is 10/1 because, like, that's just how fractions work. So, there you go, 0 as 0/1 and 10 as 10/1. Easy peasy!
3 equivalent fraction for 0 = 0/1, 0/2, 0/3,...
A fraction (not faction) with an absolute value of at least 1 is an improper fraction. One whose absolute value is in (0, 1) is a proper fraction.
1/4 is exactly half way between 0 and 1/2.
If you are asking how many different fractions lie in this range the answer is an infinite amount. If you are asking what fraction lies in the center it is 1/2
0% as a fraction = 0/1
There are infinitely many fractions and decimals between 0 and 1.
There are infinitely many of them. -1/3 is one example.
There is no fraction between 0 and 1 which is also between 1 and 2.
Oh, dude, you're hitting me with the easy math questions, huh? Alright, so 0 as a fraction is just 0/1 because anything divided by 1 is itself. And 10 as a fraction is 10/1 because, like, that's just how fractions work. So, there you go, 0 as 0/1 and 10 as 10/1. Easy peasy!
Any number that can be expressed as a fraction is rational and there are plenty of fractions from -1 to 0
3 equivalent fraction for 0 = 0/1, 0/2, 0/3,...
It is 1.5 and as an improper fraction it is 3/2
Because the probability of an impossible event is 0 and probability lies within the area of {0-1} meaning 0 is impossible and 1 is definite. If you took an improper fraction such as 5/4 and made it a proper faction, it would be 1 1/4 making it more than 1 or (100%) and that wouldn't make any sense because 4/4 (1) is definite, anything more isn't a probability.
there is no fraction
no