Suppose you have two decimal numbers, A and B. If A - B > 0 then A is the bigger decimal, if A - B < 0 then B is the bigger decimal and if A - B = 0, neither is bigger.
Repeating decimal. * * * * * It depends on the numbers! For example, 0.6 < 0.66... < 0.67 By the first inequality the repeatiing decimal is bigger, by the second the terminating one is bigger.
0.61 is bigger.
It is: 0.543 which is the larger decimal
Subtract the smaller one from the bigger one, and then put a minus sign before the answer.
Suppose you have two decimal numbers, A and B. If A - B > 0 then A is the bigger decimal, if A - B < 0 then B is the bigger decimal and if A - B = 0, neither is bigger.
53.125 is bigger than 52.916666.
a bigger decimal
Yes.
Repeating decimal. * * * * * It depends on the numbers! For example, 0.6 < 0.66... < 0.67 By the first inequality the repeatiing decimal is bigger, by the second the terminating one is bigger.
0.61 is bigger.
-0.06 is bigger.
It is: 0.543 which is the larger decimal
25.5 is much bigger.
If there is no decimal, then 019 is bigger.
7.5 is bigger than 5.77 but .5 is smaller than .77 so 5.77 has the bigger decimal than 7.5
Subtract the smaller one from the bigger one, and then put a minus sign before the answer.