if the answer is a three digit answer then make sure there is two numbers on the left and one on the right of the decimal point
the decimal point will remain in the answer given eg 2.2 * 8 = 17.6
Move the decimal point to the right one time.
Fraction refers to the amount to the right of the decimal point (amounts of less than 1), so if you multiply any (positive) number by a fraction its value will be reduced.
When multiplying a whole number by a decimal with two places, ignore the decimal point and multiply as if you were multiplying two whole numbers. After you get the answer, re-insert the decimal point so that the product has two decimal places.
When multiplying a whole number by a decimal with two places, ignore the decimal point and multiply as if you were multiplying two whole numbers. After you get the answer, re-insert the decimal point so that the product has two decimal places.
No.
Move the decimal point to the right one time.
It moves three places to the right.
Three. Count number of zeros. If multiply decimal by 100 move decimal point 2 places, etc.
Fraction refers to the amount to the right of the decimal point (amounts of less than 1), so if you multiply any (positive) number by a fraction its value will be reduced.
When multiplying a whole number by a decimal with two places, ignore the decimal point and multiply as if you were multiplying two whole numbers. After you get the answer, re-insert the decimal point so that the product has two decimal places.
You multiply by 10 (Add a zero)
When multiplying a whole number by a decimal with two places, ignore the decimal point and multiply as if you were multiplying two whole numbers. After you get the answer, re-insert the decimal point so that the product has two decimal places.
Move the decimal point one place to the right. If the decimal point is already at the end of the number, add a 0 to the extreme right before moving the decimal point.
Multiply it by 100. This moves the decimal point so that your answer is no longer in decimal form :)
Move the decimal point two spaces to the right.
No.
To multiply a whole number by a decimal, you can simply multiply the whole number by the decimal as if it were a fraction. First, ignore the decimal point and perform the multiplication. Then, count the number of decimal places in the decimal and adjust the result by moving the decimal point to the left that many places. For example, when multiplying 5 by 2.3, calculate 5 × 23 = 115, and then move the decimal point two places to the left, resulting in 1.15.