The dollar sign is to tell the reader that the number that follows in a monetary number. It is a writing convention that people use to separate pure numbers from numbers that are dollars and cents. It is not a consistent convention in that we write $10 and read it as ten dollars instead of dollars ten, but we write 10¢ and read it as it is written ten cents. Consistent or not, it is a convention that is followed here in the United States anyway.
10 cents in a dime
There are 5 cents in a nickel.
A nickel is 5 cents and a quarter is 25 cents. If T is the total number of cents, the expression would beT = 5n + 25y
Not quite. Because the last number after the decimal point is a zero, we can forget that zero exists as it holds no information. Because numbers after the decimal are moving in the opposite direction to the numbers before the decimal, a zero to the right means nothing, the same as if the first number on the left before the decimal was a zero (example 0100 is 100, the 0 at the beginning means nothing to us).So your number is essentially 0.348. We have 3 tenths, 4 hundredths, and 8 thousandths. So we are going to express this number as thousandths because that is the placing of the last number. Then just read the number after the decimal in the same way you would read a number before the decimal, in this case 348 or three hundred and forty-eight.So your answer is three hundred and forty-eight thousandths.If you were looking for an answer in cents, as in the original number is actually $0.3480, this is different. The tenths and hundredths place after the decimal are whole cents, so the number becomes 34.8 cents (The 34 has become whole numbers and the 8 has moved into the tenths position). This would be worded as thirty-four and eight tenths cents (or the lazy version, thirty-four point eight cents).
Due to the leading zeros I guess there is a missing decimal point either after or before the first zero: 0.0035 = 3.5 × 10^-3 .00035 = 0.00035 = 3.5 × 10^-4
-- Look at the number of cents. -- If the number of cents is 49 or less, then don't change the number of dollars. -- If the number of cents is 50 or more, increase the number of dollars by ' 1 '. -- Discard the cents.
Yes, you can read it that way.
The dollar sign is to tell the reader that the number that follows in a monetary number. It is a writing convention that people use to separate pure numbers from numbers that are dollars and cents. It is not a consistent convention in that we write $10 and read it as ten dollars instead of dollars ten, but we write 10¢ and read it as it is written ten cents. Consistent or not, it is a convention that is followed here in the United States anyway.
10 cents in a dime
For autolite plantnium the gap should be.00035. (got this from advanced auto)
There are 5 cents in a nickel.
10:25 = 2:5
A nickel is 5 cents and a quarter is 25 cents. If T is the total number of cents, the expression would beT = 5n + 25y
It's 15%. Just a heads up, any number of cents out of a dollar will be that number percent. Example, 34 cents=34% and so on...
As there are 100 cents in a dollar you simply divide the number of cents by 100 to find the number of dollars. 209.99 cents would equal $2.10 dollars (rounded up to the nearest cent) but $209.99 dollars would equal 20999 cents.
No. 0.1 is a number, pure and simple. 10 cents is a monetary value in a small number of countries.