No. Any number that has a decimal place is not an integer. Even if the decimal place is ".0".
62.05 The hundredths place is the second from the decimal, so you must place a 0 after the decimal and then the number.
It's still zero.
place .0 after the number, ie- 1.0, 2.0, 3.0, 4.0, ect.
0.036089457 to four decimal places (4 places of precision) is 0.0361. The number at the 5th decimal place (8) is used to round *up* the 4th decimal place figure from 0 to 1. If the number at the 5th decimal place had been
No. Any number that has a decimal place is not an integer. Even if the decimal place is ".0".
It is the tens' place.
62.05 The hundredths place is the second from the decimal, so you must place a 0 after the decimal and then the number.
The last zero in the number is insignificant.
Pi to 33 decimal places = 3.141592653589793238462643383279502 So, the number 0 is the 33rd digit (of you count the 3 before the decimal place) But, if you count after the decimal place, then it is the number 2.
350 is a whole number meaning that it can be written without a fractional or decimal component. The decimal place is after the 0. 350.00 is 350 in the hundredths place.
5000 is already in decimal form.
It is that there are no tenths in the decimal number
It's still zero.
place .0 after the number, ie- 1.0, 2.0, 3.0, 4.0, ect.
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.
0.036089457 to four decimal places (4 places of precision) is 0.0361. The number at the 5th decimal place (8) is used to round *up* the 4th decimal place figure from 0 to 1. If the number at the 5th decimal place had been