Suppose you have two decimal numbers, A and B. If A - B > 0 then A is the bigger decimal, if A - B < 0 then B is the bigger decimal and if A - B = 0, neither is bigger.
Repeating decimal. * * * * * It depends on the numbers! For example, 0.6 < 0.66... < 0.67 By the first inequality the repeatiing decimal is bigger, by the second the terminating one is bigger.
It is: 0.543 which is the larger decimal
Subtract the smaller one from the bigger one, and then put a minus sign before the answer.
3 over 50 in decimal form is .06.
To convert any decimal to percent, simply multiply the decimal by 100. So, 0.061 × 100 = 6.1%
Suppose you have two decimal numbers, A and B. If A - B > 0 then A is the bigger decimal, if A - B < 0 then B is the bigger decimal and if A - B = 0, neither is bigger.
a bigger decimal
53.125 is bigger than 52.916666.
.06 is the answer
Yes.
Repeating decimal. * * * * * It depends on the numbers! For example, 0.6 < 0.66... < 0.67 By the first inequality the repeatiing decimal is bigger, by the second the terminating one is bigger.
-0.06 is bigger.
It is: 0.543 which is the larger decimal
0.6% = 0.006 as a decimal
25.5 is much bigger.
If there is no decimal, then 019 is bigger.