It move further to the left.
The decimal point moves to the left.
The point moves further to the left.
3.8
A quotient. A decimal is simply one of many ways of representing a number.
it is the quotient of 9/8
The decimal point moves to the left.
It moves to the left.
The point moves further to the left.
With each increase in the power of ten, the decimal point moves one place to the left. You may have to insert os immediately after the decimal point to maintain that shift.
3.8
A quotient. A decimal is simply one of many ways of representing a number.
it is the quotient of 9/8
One decimal place. 3.9 is the quotient.
terminating decimal is when the quotient has the remainder of zero.
Multiply the quotient by the divisor to result in the dividend.If dividend/divisor=quotient, then dividend=quotient x divisor
No.
A decimal number is simply a way of representing a number in such a way that the place value of each digit is ten times that of the digit to its right. So all the whole numbers that we normally use are decimal numbers - because we usually count in units and tens (and hundreds, thousands, and so on). A decimal representation does not require a decimal point. The question concerns decimal fractions rather than decimal numbers.Mathematically, removing the decimal point and fractional representation makes no difference. Some people find it easier to determine the position of the decimal point in the quotient if the denominator is not a decimal fraction. That is all!