That's the same as the nearest whole number. This example rounds to zero.
round to 0.140 the ending numbers make you round up and if you must have 3 decimal places keep one ending zero
If the decimal point on a number is less than 0.5 then round the number down, for example 12.49999 rounds to 12 with zero decimal places. If the decimal point on a number is equal to or greater than 0.5 then round the number up, for example 12.500000 rounds to 13 with zero decimal places.
1.556621881 rounded to zero decimal place = 2
Zero decimal places.
It's still zero.
There is a function called ROUND which you can use to round to zero decimal places. If your number was in cell A2, the formula would be:=ROUND(A2,0)
round to 0.140 the ending numbers make you round up and if you must have 3 decimal places keep one ending zero
If you round to zero decimal places, you are simply rounding to the nearest whole number. Since the tenths decimal place is less than 5, you would round down and get an answer:256
To round 25000 to two decimal places, you would first identify the hundredths place, which is the second decimal place. In this case, the hundredths place is the zero after the decimal point. The digit immediately to the right of the hundredths place is a zero, so we do not need to round up. Therefore, 25000 rounded to two decimal places is 25000.00.
If the decimal point on a number is less than 0.5 then round the number down, for example 12.49999 rounds to 12 with zero decimal places. If the decimal point on a number is equal to or greater than 0.5 then round the number up, for example 12.500000 rounds to 13 with zero decimal places.
1.556621881 rounded to zero decimal place = 2
Zero decimal places.
The number of decimal places for the product will be the summation of the amount of decimal places of the 2 factors. For example, if your products have 2 decimals each to the right of zero then the product will have an answer with 4 decimals to the right of zero.
Zero decimal currencies are currencies that do not have any decimal places in their value, meaning they are represented in whole numbers only. This differs from traditional currencies, which have decimal places to represent fractions of a unit. For example, the Japanese Yen is a zero decimal currency, while the US Dollar is a traditional currency with two decimal places.
Zero
It refers rounding to the nearest integer or to zero decimal places.
To round a number to a particular digit, look at the digit immediately to the right of your target, in this case, the fifth decimal place. If that digit is 4 or lower, zero it and everything to the right of it out. If that digit is 5 or higher, increase the target digit by one and zero everything to the right of it out. If your target digit is a 9, increasing it will turn it to zero and increase the digit to the left of it by one.