A rational number is any number that can also be expressed as a fraction.
Any number that is presented as an integer "over" (aka divided by) an integer is automatically a rational number - that's what the definition of a rational number is.
1.2073
Yes, 0.3 is a rational, for it can be written as a fraction. By definition, rational numbers are any numbers that can written as a fraction.
example the rational approximation of pi is 3.14 so a rational approximation is shortening a really long number so it can be written out
There is no such thing as a number that is both rational and irrational. By definition, every number is either rational or irrational.
It is an incomplete definition of a rational number.
Being rational or irrational is not about "predicting the next digit"; the definition of a rational number is that you can write it as a fraction, with integer numerator and denominator.Being rational or irrational is not about "predicting the next digit"; the definition of a rational number is that you can write it as a fraction, with integer numerator and denominator.Being rational or irrational is not about "predicting the next digit"; the definition of a rational number is that you can write it as a fraction, with integer numerator and denominator.Being rational or irrational is not about "predicting the next digit"; the definition of a rational number is that you can write it as a fraction, with integer numerator and denominator.
A rational number is any number that can also be expressed as a fraction.
Rational numbers are numbers that can be written as a fraction. A whole number is a number with no decimals.
all rational numbers can be written as fractions. That is the definition of rational numbers.
a rational number
That is the definition of a rational number.
Any number with a defined end-point, such as 6.3478, is, by definition, rational.
A rational number is one that can be expressed as a ratio of two integers, the second of which is not zero. An irrational number is any real number that is not rational.
a real number is a rational number or the limit of a sequence of rational numbers, as opposed to a complex number.
A rational number is, by definition, the answer from dividing one integer by another.