Generally no. Three digits usually refers to whole numbers. In the example above I would phrase the question to the effect "Please provide answers to a resolution of one decimal place".
a decimal in which a digit or group of digits repeats without end
The only way to do this is by adding a zero after the 2 digit in the decimal.
The decimal point of a number separates the whole part of the number from the fractional part of the number. It is located between the units column and the tenths column of every number. A decimal place is one of the digits after the decimal point: The first decimal place is the first digit, which is the tenths digit The second decimal place is the second digit, which is the hundredths digit The third decimal place is the third digit, which is the thousandths digit etc. When showing or rounding to a number of decimal places there will be that number of digits after the decimal place. eg the number 5.671 has three decimal places as there are three digits after the decimal point and the second decimal place, for example, contains the digit 7.
To represent an eight-digit decimal number in Binary-Coded Decimal (BCD), each decimal digit is encoded using 4 bits. Since there are 8 digits in the number, the total number of bits required is 8 digits × 4 bits/digit = 32 bits. Therefore, 32 bits are needed to represent an eight-digit decimal number in BCD.
999,999 is 6 digits Adding 1 makes it 1,000,000 = a 7 digit number.
a decimal in which a digit or group of digits repeats without end
Only if the final digit, after the decimal point, is zero.
The only way to do this is by adding a zero after the 2 digit in the decimal.
The decimal point of a number separates the whole part of the number from the fractional part of the number. It is located between the units column and the tenths column of every number. A decimal place is one of the digits after the decimal point: The first decimal place is the first digit, which is the tenths digit The second decimal place is the second digit, which is the hundredths digit The third decimal place is the third digit, which is the thousandths digit etc. When showing or rounding to a number of decimal places there will be that number of digits after the decimal place. eg the number 5.671 has three decimal places as there are three digits after the decimal point and the second decimal place, for example, contains the digit 7.
A decimal is a way of representing a number in such a way that the place value of each digit is ten times that of the digit to its right. A decimal representation does not require a decimal point. It can have any number of digits: from one to infinitely many.
To represent an eight-digit decimal number in Binary-Coded Decimal (BCD), each decimal digit is encoded using 4 bits. Since there are 8 digits in the number, the total number of bits required is 8 digits × 4 bits/digit = 32 bits. Therefore, 32 bits are needed to represent an eight-digit decimal number in BCD.
A significant figure is the number of digits to the left of the decimal place from the right most non zero digit to the left most digit, or the number of digits from the right most digit to the right of the decimal place to the left most digit. So, 5748 to two significant digits is 5700
A single digit in a number can have a place. A number with several digits cannot.
999,999 is 6 digits Adding 1 makes it 1,000,000 = a 7 digit number.
A decimal number is simply a representation of a number such that the place value of each digit is ten times the place value of the digit to its right. It gives no information as to the location of the decimal point and so the number of decimal places.
99 + 99 = 198
It could be 4.12111... (repeating).