The place value of the digit 6 in 0.68 is one tenth. So the 6 in 0.068 is 0.6 times the place value of the 6 in 0.68.
The value in the tenths position is the 7.
Its positional place value is 1/10 = one tenth
482 rounded to the tens place value position is 480
It is expressing a number in decimal form: that is, a form in which the place value of each digit is one tenth the place value of the digit to its left.
To the nearest ten: 130 To the nearest tenth: 127.9 2 is in the tens place value position
The place value of the digit 6 in 0.68 is one tenth. So the 6 in 0.068 is 0.6 times the place value of the 6 in 0.68.
The value of a digit in a number is the face value of the digit multiplied by its place value. In the decimal system, the value of the digit immediately to the left of the decimal point is units so that its numeric value is the face value of that digit. The place value of any other digits is ten times the place value of the digit to its right - or one tenth of the digit to its left.In the binary system, the place value goes up in multiples of 2, in the octal system in powers of 8 and in hexadecimal in 16s. There are also number systems based on other bases.
It is its face value, which is the place value times the value of the digit.
The first one (from the left) is 3 times 10 = 30. The place value of each digit is one tenth of the place value of the number to its left.
1 is the tenth place value of 6.181
The value in the tenths position is the 7.
The tenths place in the place value chart is in the second column.
It means that a digit that is further to the left has a greater value than one that is further to the right. For example, the 1 in "10" has a value of ten, while the 1 in "100" has a value of hundred. In general, the "place value" for each position is ten times as much as the position to its right. The actual value of each digit is the digit itself, times its place value.
It is a tenth, of course!
The place value of 1 is one tenth.
The two is in the tenth's place.