Oh, dude, you're hitting me with some intense math here. So, if we have a 4-meter ribbon and cut it into 20cm lengths, that means we're getting 20 pieces out of it. Each piece is 0.2 meters long because 20cm is 0.2 meters. Math is wild, man.
4.68
1 dm = 0.1 m → 2.6 dm = 2.6 × 0.1 m = 0.26 m → 30m ÷ 0.26m/piece = 115 5/13 pieces You can cut 115 pieces 2.6 dm long from a piece of ribbon 30m long and will have a piece 1 dm (left over).
Devide 30 by 4.875 that gives 6 pieces of ribbon 4.875 inches long and 0.75 inches of ribbon left over.
80 m / 0.625 m = 128 pieces
30m/2.6dm = 30m/0.26m = 115.3.. ie 115 pieces.
the answer is 58 cm,Or3 meters in two pieces
2 inches
Oh, dude, you're hitting me with some intense math here. So, if we have a 4-meter ribbon and cut it into 20cm lengths, that means we're getting 20 pieces out of it. Each piece is 0.2 meters long because 20cm is 0.2 meters. Math is wild, man.
4.68
Oh, dude, you're really making me do math right now? Okay, fine. So, 2 meters is 200 centimeters, and if Chester cuts it into 5 equal pieces, each piece would be 40 centimeters long. There you go, Chester's got 5 pieces of ribbon, all 40 centimeters long. Happy now?
Two pieces, one 9 inches long and the other 45 inches long. If you meant: How many pieces of ribbon 9 inches long can be cut from a piece 54 inches long, then: 54 inches ÷ 9 inches/piece = 6 pieces.
6 pieces can be made, assuming you lose nothing in the cutting. 9/1.5 = 6.
1 dm = 0.1 m → 2.6 dm = 2.6 × 0.1 m = 0.26 m → 30m ÷ 0.26m/piece = 115 5/13 pieces You can cut 115 pieces 2.6 dm long from a piece of ribbon 30m long and will have a piece 1 dm (left over).
Devide 30 by 4.875 that gives 6 pieces of ribbon 4.875 inches long and 0.75 inches of ribbon left over.
If you have 16 yards you can't make a 25 yard long piece. I think you meant how many 25 FEET long pieces. There are 3 feet in one yard. Figure it out.
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