There are 22 sums, if you don't include a number more than once. Where did you here a question like that?
3*33 ■
add the number how many times it says
Multiply the numbers, count the total number of decimal places in the problem and place that many in your product.
it cant
24680
It means that either the numbers involved in the word problem are all rational or that any irrational numbers are being approximated by rational numbers.
36324
3*33 ■
try to find what number times the same numbers equals the number that you have.
add the number how many times it says
Multiply the numbers, count the total number of decimal places in the problem and place that many in your product.
it cant
93,876
24680
You take all the numbers on your problem, then add them all up. Then divide by the number of factors you have.
You may or may not be able to. The diameter of a circle with circumference 10 cm is 10/pi, a division problem. But there is no answer using rational numbers.
To find how many combinations of six numbers can sum to 138, you need to consider the range of possible values for each number and the constraints of the problem. If the numbers can be any integers, the solution involves combinatorial counting methods, often requiring more context to determine the limits on each number. However, if the numbers must be non-negative integers, this is a combinatorial problem that can be solved using the "stars and bars" theorem. Without specific constraints on the numbers, it's challenging to provide an exact count.