Mental math like if 12 into 72 it will not be a double digit if you divide 100 by 10 it will be double digits. Most times if you have a tripple digit number and divide it by double digit the answer will be a double digit.
To divide a three-digit number, start by determining how many times the divisor fits into the leading digits of the dividend. Estimate the quotient and multiply the divisor by this estimate, then subtract the result from the leading digits. Bring down the next digit from the dividend and repeat the process until all digits have been processed, arriving at the final quotient and remainder.
you multiply first then you divide
No, the quotient does not always have the same number of digits when dividing a three-digit number by a one-digit number. The number of digits in the quotient depends on the specific values involved. For instance, dividing 100 by 5 results in a quotient of 20 (two digits), while dividing 999 by 3 results in a quotient of 333 (three digits). Thus, the digit count can vary based on the numbers used in the division.
112
No.
2 or 3 digits.
To divide a three-digit number, start by determining how many times the divisor fits into the leading digits of the dividend. Estimate the quotient and multiply the divisor by this estimate, then subtract the result from the leading digits. Bring down the next digit from the dividend and repeat the process until all digits have been processed, arriving at the final quotient and remainder.
Unless you are using remainders, no because the divisor may not divide evenly into the dividend you idiots.
you multiply first then you divide
No, the quotient does not always have the same number of digits when dividing a three-digit number by a one-digit number. The number of digits in the quotient depends on the specific values involved. For instance, dividing 100 by 5 results in a quotient of 20 (two digits), while dividing 999 by 3 results in a quotient of 333 (three digits). Thus, the digit count can vary based on the numbers used in the division.
112
No.
When you divide 1 million (1,000,000) by 3, the quotient is 333,333.333..., where the digit "3" repeats indefinitely after the decimal point. Therefore, the repeating digit in the quotient is "3."
100
If the number formed by the last three digits is divisible by 8. Alternatively, if the number is divisible by 2, the quotient is divisible by 2 and that quotient is divisible by 2.
Divide 3 by 8, then divide that quotient by 100 . When the day arrives when you understand what you're doing and why, you can divide 3 by 800 .
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