repeating decimal
It is a repeating decimal.
they are called repeating decimals.
A non-terminating decimal is a decimal that does not terminate, and goes on forever, and a repeating decimal is a number that continues on forever with a repeated pattern
If you repeat the pattern, adding one more zero every time, then no. To qualify as a "repeating decimal", the same digits have to repeat over and over.
repeating decimal
It is a repeating decimal.
.833 IS a repeating decimal. This is a rational number as well as it has a repetitive pattern.
It is a repeating decimal.
If it continues in the same pattern, repeating the same two digits ad infinitum, then yes, it is a repeating decimal. If it ends there, not really.
they are called repeating decimals.
A non-terminating decimal is a decimal that does not terminate, and goes on forever, and a repeating decimal is a number that continues on forever with a repeated pattern
yes, repeating decimals (those that have infinite - never ending - number of digits after the decimal point and these decimals show repeating pattern) are rational numbers, because they can be written as fractions.
Basically No, The number pi has a decimal fraction that goes on forever and never falls into a repeating pattern. That is characteristic of irrational numbers like pi.
If you repeat the pattern, adding one more zero every time, then no. To qualify as a "repeating decimal", the same digits have to repeat over and over.
Actually, a repeating decimal is not necessarily an irrational number. A repeating decimal is a decimal number that has a repeating pattern of digits after the decimal point. While some repeating decimals can be irrational, such as 0.1010010001..., others can be rational, like 0.3333... which is equal to 1/3. Irrational numbers are numbers that cannot be expressed as a simple fraction, and they have non-repeating, non-terminating decimal representations.
No, 33 is an integer. 0.3333 repeating is a repeating decimal.