put a dot above the repeated number which is after the decimal
that dot means reccurent, its usually above a decimal number, & means that digit continues on forever. E.g. put 1/3 as a decimal. this wouldn't be 0.3 it would be 0.3 (with the dot above the 3) so for the example above the answer is 0.333333333333333333333333333(continues on forever) By the way, the number can have a dot on more than one of its digits
You draw the dot first!~
Only approximately. Since pi is an irrational number, it cannot be expressed numerically, but only symbolically. You can put a dot on the line very close to where pi would be, but if the scale of the line were magnified enough, there would always be some error in the placement of the dot.
A dot on the number line that represents the location of the number
you put a dot on the number.
put a dot above the repeated number which is after the decimal
do you put timing chain on 3.1 96 Chevy lumina dot to dot
A closed dot includes the number, an open dot excludes the number. Greater than excludes the number, so it would have an open dot.
Dot Richardon was number 1
You draw a number line. Then put a dot at the point at x. Happy graphing!
It's ok , dot 4 is an improvement formula from dot 3.
If it calls for dot 5, yes. If it has dot 3 or dot 4, no.
You need to have the number displayed, and documentation of the validity of the DOT number.
that dot means reccurent, its usually above a decimal number, & means that digit continues on forever. E.g. put 1/3 as a decimal. this wouldn't be 0.3 it would be 0.3 (with the dot above the 3) so for the example above the answer is 0.333333333333333333333333333(continues on forever) By the way, the number can have a dot on more than one of its digits
the dot on the i
someone told me that it is a trick question. the answer is 2 because the "i" in pair has 1 dot and the "i" in dice has 1 dot, so when you put them together you get 2 dots