To round a number to a particular digit, look at the digit immediately to the right of your target, in this case, the second 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.
As the digit after the decimal point is 6, we round the number up to 29.
The digit after the decimal is a 9, so we round up the number to give 24 as the answer.
The digit after the decimal point is a 9, so we round up to give 7 as the answer.
nearest tenth is first place after the decimal. Look to the second place after the decimal; if it is less than 5 you keep the original first place after the decimal; if grater than 5, you round up by adding 1 to the irst place after the decimal; in your case since the second place after decimal is 0 then the nearest tenth is 3.0
No but if there's a decimal in front of the first 9 and you round it in the nearest tenth it will be.
The nearest tenth of 1%. Here you have to translate 1% into a decimal #. You will have to convert 1% into 0.01. Therefore, 0.01 will round down to 0.0.
As the digit after the decimal point is 6, we round the number up to 29.
The digit after the decimal is a 9, so we round up the number to give 24 as the answer.
The digit after the decimal point is a 9, so we round up to give 7 as the answer.
1, if you want to round it to the nearest whole number. For rounding it to the nearest tenth (one decimal place), the answer is 0.7. For rounding it to the nearest hundredth (two decimal places), the answer is 0.67. etc. When you round it to the nearest millionth (six decimal places), you'll no longer be rounding up, because the answer will be the same as what you started with: 0.666666.
Rounding to 1 decimal place (1.d.p) is 1.2Also known as rounding to the nearest hundredth
11.66 The second place after the decimal place is the hundredths place, and 1 does not round up.
To round a number, the decimal place that you want to round to, needs to be specified. If you want to round to the tenths place or to 1 decimal place, then this number is already there: 7.7 is seven and seven tenths. If you want to round it to zero decimal places, or to the nearest whole number, then look at the tenths place and if it is 0-4 you round down to 7, if it is 5-9 (which it is) you round up to 8.
nearest tenth is first place after the decimal. Look to the second place after the decimal; if it is less than 5 you keep the original first place after the decimal; if grater than 5, you round up by adding 1 to the irst place after the decimal; in your case since the second place after decimal is 0 then the nearest tenth is 3.0
It rounds to 0.8 to one decimal place or as 1 to the nearest whole number or integer
No but if there's a decimal in front of the first 9 and you round it in the nearest tenth it will be.
Tenth place is 1 to right of decimal, so 4.3188 is 4.3