three
Since both multiplicands are integers, then so is their product.
An infinite number.
Not necessarily. 1/7 = 0.142857142857... infinitely many decimal places. 1/3 = 0.333.... infinitely many decimal places. 1/5 = 0.2 No zeros in the denominator in any of the three but number of decimal places range from 1 to infinitely many.
An infinite number.
There will be five decimal places.
Six - to the millionths.
....that depends upon how many decimal places you are looking for.....
Six of them.
Two decimal places.
1, to the right
Three decimal places.A simple rule of thumb for multiplying decimals; ignore the decimals and just multiply the number together.0.111 x 0.1; would become 111 x 1 = 111Then count all the numbers after the decimal. 0.111 (3) and 0.1 (1) 3+1=4And put the decimal point that many places from the right.With four places 111 becomes:11.1 ( one place)1.11 (two places)0.111 (three places)0.0111 (four places)0.111 x 0.1 = 0.0111----------------------------There is 2 decimals digits in hundredths and 1 decimal digit in tenths, thus when multiplied together they will have 2 + 1 = 3 decimal digits.However, if the decimal digits on the right hand end are zero they are not written, and less than 3 can be written.Examples:0.97 × 0.3 = 0.2910.17 × 0.3 = 0.0510.12 × 0.5 = 0.060 = 0.06When multiplying decimal numbers, multiply them without the decimal point and then put the decimal point back in to the result by counting the total number of digits after the decimal points in the original numbers and ensuring that the same number are in the result.Thus as the first number has 2 decimal places and the second that 1 decimal place, the result will have 1 + 2 = 3 decimal places.
1.324 has 4 significant figures.It has 3 decimal places.
It depends how the destination cell is formatted. Number format usually allows the user to specify the number of decimal places - from none to as many as you want. If the destination cell has been formatted to two decimal places - the result will be the same as 3245.45
An integer is a whole number ( a number with no decimal places ) so there are 20 integers. 21 if you include the 0.
Infinitely many. For example, 82 + 82, 81 + 83, 80 + 84, 79 + 85, ... -10 + 174, -11 +175, ... Then consider number with 1 decimal place: 81.9 + 82.1, 81.8 + 82.2, ... and 2 decimal places, 3 decimal places and all the way to infinitely many dp. Then you can start looking at sums of 3 number, 4 numbers, ... , infinitely many numbers, and in each case with 0, 1, 2, ... decimal places. After that, you can try multiplication and other mathematical functions.
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