All remainders on a calculator will appear as a decimal. Some TI scientific calculators can convert the answer into a fraction.
0.0678
no, there would be absolutely no place to put them in your decimal.
Buy a good calculator.
if u have a regular calculator, you cannot put y =, if u have a graphing calculator, then you press the "y =" button
you would need a calculator with an "integer divide" button the TI-15 has one
All remainders on a calculator will appear as a decimal. Some TI scientific calculators can convert the answer into a fraction.
0.0678
no, there would be absolutely no place to put them in your decimal.
remainders are cool
Buy a good calculator.
if u have a regular calculator, you cannot put y =, if u have a graphing calculator, then you press the "y =" button
You should not have any remainders in fractions!
If the dividend is a multiple of 8 then there will be no remainders in the quotient otherwise the possible remainders are limitless
You need a scientific calculator, or one with function keys.
When using a calculator to find remainders in division problems, you have to do it differently. When you get the quotient (presumably the number you showed me), subtract the integer part (46 in this case). Multiply that by the divisor, and there's your remainder.
There are 8 possible remainders - including 0.