tenth thousand
Digit refers to a number or a finger
Multiplying by multi-digit numbers is similar to multiplying by two-digit numbers in that both processes involve breaking down the numbers into place values and multiplying each digit by each digit in the other number. The key similarity lies in the application of the distributive property, where each digit in one number is multiplied by each digit in the other number, and then the products are added together to get the final result. This process is consistent whether you are multiplying by a two-digit number or a multi-digit number.
There are 9 digits that can be the first digit (1-9); for each of these there is 1 digit that can be the second digit (6); for each of these there are 10 digits that can be the third digit (0-9); for each of these there are 10 digits that can be the fourth digit (0-9). → number of numbers is 9 × 1 × 10 × 10 = 900 such numbers.
98642
A way of writing a number that shows the value of each digit.:)
tenth thousand
Digit refers to a number or a finger
Multiplying by multi-digit numbers is similar to multiplying by two-digit numbers in that both processes involve breaking down the numbers into place values and multiplying each digit by each digit in the other number. The key similarity lies in the application of the distributive property, where each digit in one number is multiplied by each digit in the other number, and then the products are added together to get the final result. This process is consistent whether you are multiplying by a two-digit number or a multi-digit number.
There are 9 digits that can be the first digit (1-9); for each of these there is 1 digit that can be the second digit (6); for each of these there are 10 digits that can be the third digit (0-9); for each of these there are 10 digits that can be the fourth digit (0-9). → number of numbers is 9 × 1 × 10 × 10 = 900 such numbers.
98642
it means to write the value. for example.... 1.639. just write the value.
To multiply two digit numbers, multiply each place value of a factor by each place value digit and add the results.
Binary Digit Binary Digit
the place of each digit help the value of the number by using your multuplication
partial products
I suspect you mean "without repeated digits", and I'll answer it that way.Here's how I would construct all the 5-digit numbers without repeated digits:The first digit can be any one of 9 (1 thru 9 but not zero). For each of these . . .The second digit can be any one of 9 (zero thru 9 but not the same as the first one). For each of these . . .The third digit can be any one of the remaining 8. For each of these . . .The fourth digit can be any one of the remaining 7. For each of these . . .The fifth digit can be any one of the remaining 6.Total number of possibilities = (9 x 9 x 8 x 7 x 6) = 27,216