Well, isn't that just a lovely repeating decimal? Let's turn that into a fraction, shall we? If we call x = 0.5555555555, we can multiply x by 10 to get 10x = 5.5555555555. Then, we can subtract x from 10x to get 9x = 5, which simplifies to x = 5/9. And there you have it, a beautiful fraction created from that repeating decimal.
Chat with our AI personalities
Every fraction is an equivalent fraction: each fraction in decimal form has an equivalent rational fraction as well as an equivalent percentage fraction.
A fraction that has a different sign to the first fraction.
Divide the fraction by 100, and you will get the percentage of a fraction.
Or both. That's a complex fraction.
The number below the fraction bar in a fraction is the denominator. The number above the fraction bar is the numerator.