80 m / 0.625 m = 128 pieces
It really depends how long you make the pieces. You are better off in keeping the pieces multiples of 5 or 10 so you can maximise the amount of equal pieces
The other piece is t-2 metres long.
1 dm = 0.1 m → 2.6 dm = 2.6 × 0.1 m = 0.26 m → 30m ÷ 0.26m/piece = 115 5/13 pieces You can cut 115 pieces 2.6 dm long from a piece of ribbon 30m long and will have a piece 1 dm (left over).
3.48 metres
Each piece is 40 cm long.
40 cm
To cut a 2-meter long piece into 5 equal parts, you would divide the total length (2 meters) by the number of pieces (5). This would result in each piece being 0.4 meters in length. This calculation is done by dividing 2 meters by 5, which equals 0.4 meters per piece.
80 m / 0.625 m = 128 pieces
Oh, dude, you're really making me do math right now? Okay, fine. So, 2 meters is 200 centimeters, and if Chester cuts it into 5 equal pieces, each piece would be 40 centimeters long. There you go, Chester's got 5 pieces of ribbon, all 40 centimeters long. Happy now?
It really depends how long you make the pieces. You are better off in keeping the pieces multiples of 5 or 10 so you can maximise the amount of equal pieces
The other piece is t-2 metres long.
30m/2.6dm = 30m/0.26m = 115.3.. ie 115 pieces.
the answer is 58 cm,Or3 meters in two pieces
Well, darling, if you cut that rope in half, you'll end up with two pieces that are each 2 meters and 3 centimeters long. Simple math, honey, nothing fancy about it. Just make sure you don't trip over those two pieces while strutting your stuff!
.375 m
9 inches