Sometimes it is advantageous to express a value in round numbers. To round to a particular place, look at the digit immediately to the right of the one you want to round to. If that digit is 4, 3, 2, 1 or 0, zero it and everything to the right of it out. If that digit is 5, 6, 7, 8 or 9, increase your target digit by one and zero everything to the right of it out. If your target digit is 9, it will become a zero and increase the digit to the left of it by one.
Are you asking how to round to thousands place when there's a zero in that place
It does if you round to the tenths place.
You would round it up at the third decimal place to 3.116.
No, i would round it to the hundredths place = 0.56
round to the place value of the bold digit of 57,294
Are you asking how to round to thousands place when there's a zero in that place
To round 7.7 to the nearest decimal place, you would look at the digit in the second decimal place, which is 7. Since this digit is 5 or greater, you would round up the digit in the first decimal place by adding 1. Therefore, 7.7 rounded to the nearest decimal place would be 7.8.
That depends which place you want to round it to.
It does if you round to the tenths place.
11.66 The second place after the decimal place is the hundredths place, and 1 does not round up.
You would round it up at the third decimal place to 3.116.
No, i would round it to the hundredths place = 0.56
round to the place value of the bold digit of 57,294
When you round off the number 0.472 to the hundredths place you get 0.47. If you round it off to the tenths place, it would be 0.5.
7,006. If the place you are converting is < 5, then round down (7,005.49, for example, would round down to 7,005). If the place is ≥ 5, round up.
You cannot round a number with a place value larger than the place value you seek to round it to. i.e. You cannot round thousands to hundreds, hundreds to tens, tens to ones, etc.
round 0.2975 to 1 decimal place = 0.3