To determine that 479 divided by 6 will have a quotient of 2 without performing the division, you can use estimation. Since 6 multiplied by 2 equals 12, you can see that 479 is significantly larger than 12. Additionally, you can look at the first digit of 479, which is 4; since 6 is greater than 4, the first part of the quotient will include 2 when considering higher digits. A rough estimate shows that 6 multiplied by 80 equals 480, which is just above 479, confirming that the quotient is indeed 2.
No remainder because the digits of 45549 finally add up to 9
You can not divide both the numerator and denominator without getting a decimal
One quick way to tell whether or not a cell is dividing is to look at the number of chromosomes. If the number is doubled then it is dividing.
id
Dividing 180 by 459 gives you approximately 0.39215686275. Since ratios are typically expressed as whole numbers, you might want to multiply this decimal by a common factor to get a whole number ratio. But hey, who am I to tell you what to do?
You can't tell anything about the quotient until you know whatthe divisor is going to be.-- If I divide your 4,796 by 4, the quotient is 1,199 . . . 4 digits.-- And if I divide it by 2,398, the quotient is 2 . . . . only 1 digit.
506
No, because the digits of 4554 finally add up to 9 and 4545/9 = 505
No remainder because the digits of 45549 finally add up to 9
There is not an easy way without some division. The simplest is to check the divisibility of the number formed by the last three digits.
You can not divide both the numerator and denominator without getting a decimal
One quick way to tell whether or not a cell is dividing is to look at the number of chromosomes. If the number is doubled then it is dividing.
If the denominator has ANY prime factor other than 2 or 5, then the decimal is repeating.
Stop looking and start dividing! Looking is not going to get you an answer!
From what I can tell, it means "Without Division" or "Without dividing". I don't know why those would be used by Richard II as a sort of a motto, but, maybe you've found out more since asking this?
If you can cut it in half three times and get a whole number each time, it's divisible by 8.
just dividing it