You can do this in several ways. You can round to the nearest decimal; you can also round up, or round down.
To get the decimal, divide the numerator of the fraction by the denominator. If the decimal runs to more than one place, then you have to round it to one decimal place.
If a number is not in decimal format you simply don't need to round it. Or better say you can not round it because it is not a math rule.
to round to one decimal point all you have to do is move the decimal point once to the right for example: 0.808 becomes 08.08
Go to the second decimal place; if it is less than 5; round down. If it is 5 or greater, round up. So, 1.51 rounded to 1 decimal place is 1.5.
6.5- you round it until it has one decimal.
There is no need to round 1097 to any decimal places as there are no digits following a decimal point.
0.938
You can do this in several ways. You can round to the nearest decimal; you can also round up, or round down.
You round it to 27.5
85 rounded to three decimal places is 85.000
round 0.2975 to 1 decimal place = 0.3
round 2.439 to 2 decimal places = 2.44
to round 68.4 to one decimal place = 68.4
In Excel, the second argument of the Round function specifies the number of decimal places to round to. If this number is negative, it rounds to corresponding digits before the decimal point.
To get the decimal, divide the numerator of the fraction by the denominator. If the decimal runs to more than one place, then you have to round it to one decimal place.
You can only round a number to 2 decimal places if it currently has more than 2 decimal places.