If you mean: 1/5+6 then its is 6.2 as a decimal
a decimal is part of a whole number e.g. 0.5 is half a whole numbera whole number is just a normal number e.g. 1, 2, 5, 8, 14, 56 etc. A whole number is on the left side of the dot and the decimal is on the right.Example: whole number decimal decimal number 43 . 684
A whole number is 0, 1, 2 A decimal is 0.0 , 1.0 , 2.0 So a decimal would be 3/4 = 4* 0.75 = 3 So 0.75 would be a decimal number.
You can, but only if the decimal is 1.0+. okay, say your decimal is 1.2, then you put the 2 over 10 and keep the one as a whole so it looks like 1 2/10 or 1 1/5
The decimal point is used to separate the whole number from the fractional part of the number. For example in 1.5, 1 is the whole number and .5 is the fractional number. Expressed in another way, 1.5 is the same as 1 1/2
1/2 can't become a whole number.
The difference is that all whole numbers are decimal numbers, but not all decimal numbers are whole numbers. For example a whole number such as 1 is a decimal number but a decimal number such as 1.5 is not a whole number.
no, 1 over a whole number is it in it's simplest form. in decimal it is 0.05
decimal: .25 whole: 25 fraction: 25/100 or 1/4
A whole number is a number in which there is no decimal or fraction after the number or the number is a fraction or decimal. ex. ...-2, -1, 0, 1, 2...
Not necessarily.0.5 < 1 < 1.5 So, the whole number 1 is more than the decimal fraction 0.5 but less than the decimal fraction 1.5 but the decimal fraction 0.5 is less than the whole number 1 while the decimal fraction 1.5 is more than the whole number 1.
a decimal is part of a whole number e.g. 0.5 is half a whole numbera whole number is just a normal number e.g. 1, 2, 5, 8, 14, 56 etc. A whole number is on the left side of the dot and the decimal is on the right.Example: whole number decimal decimal number 43 . 684
No, 2.3 is a decimal, not a whole number. A whole number is a 1, 2, 3, and so on.
100% = 1 (whole number)1.0 (decimal number)
decimal point to the left of the whole number. Example: 1= whole number. Less than 1 as a decimal is .00, .01, 02 etc.
1 over 3 is not a whole number.
5/2 as a mixed number is 2 and 1/2 or 2.5 as a decimal number
You can not have a whole number of the decimal, unless you want to round the number to the closest whole number, in which case would be 1.