To estimate the number of digits in a tetration you have to use the modulus value.
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4.11, to the justified number of significant digits.
To estimate the quotient, we first round off the divisor and the dividend to the nearest tens, hundreds, or thousands and then divide the rounded numbers. In a division sum, when the divisor is made up of 2 digits or more than 2 digits, it helps if we first estimate the quotient and then try to find the actual number.
A Merchant Number is usually between 6 and 15 digits long. Examples: Natwest Streamline Merchant Number = 8 digits HSBC Merchant Number = 8 digits Lloyds TSB Cardnet Merchant Number = 15 digits Bank of Scotland Merchant Number = 15 digits Barclays Merchant Services Merchant Number = 7 digits American Express Merchant Number = 10 digits Diners Club Merchant Number = 10 digits JCB (Japan Credit Bureau) Merchant Number = 13 digits Elavon Merchant Number = 10 digits AIB (Allied Irish Bank) Merchant Number = 11 digits Ulster Bank (For Ireland Vendors only) Merchant Number = 8 digits Chase Payment Tech Merchant Number = 6 digits
An irrational number has a never-ending decimal expansion. To estimate it's value, you'd just state the expansion to some number of digits. Ex: sqrt(2) is approximately 1.4142135623730950488 pi is approximately 3.14159265358979323846
The least whole number with 6 digits is greater because it has more digits than 5 digits.