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One column in a hundredths grid has 10/100's in it One column in a tenths grid has 1/10 in it. You can tell that 10/100=1/10 by looking at the two visuals.
2.63
To represent 1.13-1.02 on a hundredths grid, you would first draw 1 whole square to represent the 1 before the decimal point. Next, you would divide the grid into 100 smaller squares to represent the hundredths. You would shade in 13 out of the 100 squares to represent the 0.13 part of 1.13. Then, you would subtract 1.02 by shading in 2 out of the 100 squares to represent the 0.02 part. The difference between the shaded squares for 1.13 and 1.02 would give you the visual representation of the subtraction on the hundredths grid.
It depends on the scale you choose for your axes. If the major grid lines are at single integers (1, 2, 3...) then 0.4 would be 4 tenths of the way from the origin to the No.1 grid-line. If though you made every tenth grid-line = 1 then 0.4 would be the 4th grid-line.
1 over 14 is 0.07, rounded to the nearest hundreth's place.