35 because of it needed to be the nearest dollar amount.
17.19
32900
Oh, dude, rounding 950 to the nearest ten means you look at the digit in the tens place, which is 5, so it stays the same. So, it's still 950. And rounding to the nearest hundred, you look at the digit in the hundreds place, which is 9, so it also stays the same. So, 950 rounded to the nearest ten and hundred is still 950. Like, no change needed here.
147 is a whole number, so no rounding is needed.
35 because of it needed to be the nearest dollar amount.
0.230
17.19
It is already a whole number - no rounding is needed.
6.00
I'm sorry, but you forgot to include the number you needed rounded. This question can't be answered.
11.60 is already rounded to the nearest tenth. You can (optionally) remove the trailing zero to read 11.6 if needed.
32900
It is 80 because 5 is greater than 475 to the nearest tens is 80.
This question is too vague! More information is needed. 16.33 can be rounded down to 16.00. 16. 57 can be rounded up to 17.00.
Any number in this range rounded off to the nearest hundredth (0.01) will give you 33.05: 33.045 to 33.054999...33.05 rounded off to the nearest:Thousandths or smaller (0.001) = 33.050 (the last 0 is needed, add more 0s if smaller than thousandths)Hundredths (0.01) = 33.05 (33.05 is already the nearest hundredth)Tenths (0.1) = 33.1 (33.05: 5,6,7,8 and 9 will be rounded up)Ones = 33 (33.05: 0,1,2,3,4 will be rounded down)Tens = 30 (33.05: same reasoning as the ones)Hundreds = 0 (33.05: same reasoning as the ones)Thousands or more = 0 (numbers before the first 3 are treated as 0)
10.0 and 9.9 seconds is not the same thing when accuracy is needed, not rounded off numbers. 10.0 and 9.9 seconds is not the same thing when accuracy is needed, not rounded off numbers. 10.0 and 9.9 seconds is not the same thing when accuracy is needed, not rounded off numbers.