Two places.
4 times.
It depends on what numbers you are multiplying and how many decimals places they each have. It doesn't always haveto move to the right.
The correct answer is one decimal place.
Multiplying decimals is when you take two numbers with decimal points, ignore the decimals, multiply the numbers like normal, and then count the total number of decimal places in both numbers. The final answer will have that many decimal places. It's like regular multiplication, but with a little extra pizzazz.
Two places.
Two of them.
It will be two places.
Yes. You first multiply, then however many decimal places you were multiplying, you move over.
* One decimal place. * To the tenth place.
Well, honey, you move the decimal to the right when you're multiplying by powers of 10. It's as simple as that. Just count how many zeros are in the power of 10 and shift that decimal over to the right that many places. Easy peasy lemon squeezy!
4 times.
It depends on what numbers you are multiplying and how many decimals places they each have. It doesn't always haveto move to the right.
The correct answer is one decimal place.
probably 3, thousandths place.
Multiplying decimals is when you take two numbers with decimal points, ignore the decimals, multiply the numbers like normal, and then count the total number of decimal places in both numbers. The final answer will have that many decimal places. It's like regular multiplication, but with a little extra pizzazz.
6 decimal place