That depends on what you want to round it to, like one decimal place or a whole number, as in the following examples: One decimal place: 1.7 A whole number: 2
To write a decimal you go to the end of the whole number 5 for example and then you put a period (5.) then you add the rest of the decimal like 5.6
When you are dividing a decimal by a whole number you have to bring up the decimal. For example, 36.4 divided by 2, you would take the decimal that is between the 6 and the 4 in 36.4 and you bring it up. Then you divide like you normally would.
An integer is any non-decimal number like 5 or -3 or 0. An whole number is any non-negative, non-decimal number like 0 or 3 or 5. An integer can be a negative number whereas a whole number cannot be negative. And that all have a freat day !!$
It is a whole number so it can be done without any decimal points like this: 10000 You can add a decimal point and have two decimal places, like this: 10000.00
Yes, they can be but some of them aren't or have a whole number with a fraction of a number. A decimal that's a whole number can be like 1.0 3.0 68.0 etc. A decimal that's not a whole number can be like 0.3 0.89 0.4 etc. A decimal that includes both a decimal and a fraction of number can be like 9.56 6.3 1.23 etc.
They are similar because when you compare decimals you say the larger one has more value so the decimal is larger like in comparing whole numbers the number that has more value is larger. So they are very similar.
Yes, 8 is a whole number. A half number would be 2.5. Any number without a decimal is a whole number. If it has a decimal in the number, like .5, then it is a number with part of a number.
That depends on what you want to round it to, like one decimal place or a whole number, as in the following examples: One decimal place: 1.7 A whole number: 2
A number with decimals (digits after the decimal point) is not equal to ANY whole number. You can round it to the nearest whole number, if you like - that's the closest you can get.
To write a decimal you go to the end of the whole number 5 for example and then you put a period (5.) then you add the rest of the decimal like 5.6
When you are dividing a decimal by a whole number you have to bring up the decimal. For example, 36.4 divided by 2, you would take the decimal that is between the 6 and the 4 in 36.4 and you bring it up. Then you divide like you normally would.
An integer is any non-decimal number like 5 or -3 or 0. An whole number is any non-negative, non-decimal number like 0 or 3 or 5. An integer can be a negative number whereas a whole number cannot be negative. And that all have a freat day !!$
It is a whole number so it can be done without any decimal points like this: 10000 You can add a decimal point and have two decimal places, like this: 10000.00
4
A whole number is a number with no decimal or fraction, like 5, 67, and 3. An integer is a split whole number, like 3.67, 56.2, 8/7, and 8 4/5.
To convert a decimal number like 1.34 to a whole number, you would typically round down to the nearest whole number. In this case, 1.34 rounded down would be 1 as a whole number. Whole numbers do not include any decimal or fractional parts, so the number 1.34 cannot be represented as a whole number without rounding.