You should place a zero in the quotient when the divisor cannot fit into the current portion of the dividend being considered. For example, in long division, if the number you are dividing into (the divisor) is greater than the number you are currently working with from the dividend, you write a zero in the quotient to indicate that the divisor does not fit into that portion. This helps maintain the correct place value in the quotient as you continue the division process.
Zero, unless the divisor is 0 in whichcase the quotient is not defined.
A 0 in the tens place of any number represents 0 times 10, which is 0.
A quotient of two numbers cannot have a denominator which is zero: such a fraction is not defined.
Two integers can yield a quotient of zero when the numerator is zero and the denominator is any non-zero integer. For example, the integers 0 and 5 produce a quotient of 0 when 0 is divided by 5 (0 ÷ 5 = 0). However, dividing by zero is undefined, so the denominator cannot be zero.
Their quotient is positive if the integers have the same sign;negative if the integers have different signs;zero if the dividend is zero (and the divisor is not).
When you're quotient is in the hundredths place or more or when you're dividend or divisor has a placeholder zero as well.
No, for example 10/100 is 0.1
A quotient is undefined if the divisor is zero.
Oh, dude, if there's a zero in the ones place of a quotient, it means the remainder is zero. But hey, don't get too excited, like, it's not a party or anything. It just means the division worked out nice and tidy.
Zero, unless the divisor is 0 in whichcase the quotient is not defined.
A 0 in the tens place of any number represents 0 times 10, which is 0.
A quotient in which the numerator or denominator are undefined will be undefined. For example p/q is an undefined quotient until you know something about p and q. Also, if the denominator is zero, the division is undefined.
As long as the number is not zero, the quotient remains unchanged. If the multiplier is zero then the quotient is undefined.
Zero divided by anything is always zero.
When the quotient of two integers is positive, either both integers are positive or both negative. When the quotient of two integers is negative, one of the integers is positive and one negative. When the quotient of two integers is zero, the first integer is zero and the second one is anything but zero.
A quotient of two numbers cannot have a denominator which is zero: such a fraction is not defined.
Two integers can yield a quotient of zero when the numerator is zero and the denominator is any non-zero integer. For example, the integers 0 and 5 produce a quotient of 0 when 0 is divided by 5 (0 ÷ 5 = 0). However, dividing by zero is undefined, so the denominator cannot be zero.