Any number of percent is the ratio of that number to 100.
Any number that can be made by dividing one integer by another. The word comes from "ratio".
Any number that can be expressed as the ratio of two integers is a rational number.
In schools, for example, it is usually expressed as the number of students per teacher. In any case, ratio means comparing one number to another, so staffing ratio compares number of students to number of staff (teachers).
Not quite. A rational number is a ratio and each rational number is a ratio of specific pairs of integers - not ANY two integers. And, of course, 0 is not allowed on the denominator.
Any number of percent is the ratio of that number to 100.
Any number that can be made by dividing one integer by another. The word comes from "ratio".
Any number that can be expressed as the ratio of two integers is a rational number.
In schools, for example, it is usually expressed as the number of students per teacher. In any case, ratio means comparing one number to another, so staffing ratio compares number of students to number of staff (teachers).
The first multiple of any number is the number itself. For it to be common, it needs to be compared to another set of multiples.
-- Any number that can be written as the ratio of two whole numbers is a rational number.-- Any whole number can be written as the ratio of that number to ' 1 ', so it's rational.
Not quite. A rational number is a ratio and each rational number is a ratio of specific pairs of integers - not ANY two integers. And, of course, 0 is not allowed on the denominator.
I think you mean rational number. A rational number is any number that you can write as a fraction (or ratio) of two integers (+/- 1,2,3,... etc)
a rational number
A rational number.
It is a rational number.
Multiply both number by any non-zero number and you will get an equivalent ratio.