No, the sum of a repeating decimal and a terminating decimal is never a terminating decimal.
A terminating decimal is a decimal that ends. A repeating decimal is a decimal that goes on and on.
you divide the numerator by the denominator on you will get a decimal and you write it 00.00 that is a decimal
It is already in decimal form.
The decimal is the . symbol.
Since you didnt put a decimal point that is just 15 inches lol
0.015. The first number after the decimal point is tenths, the second is hundredths, the third is thousandths.
This can be read as "fifteen".
Fifteen hundred-thousandths.
I think this is it .00015
Survival Apocalypse Vlogs - 2012 00015-MTS 1-3 was released on: USA: 16 January 2012
To say .00015, you would read it as "fifteen ten-thousandths" or "point zero zero zero one five." This number is in the thousandths place value, with the digit 1 in the ten-thousandths place.
You must always disregard preceeding zeros when dealing with positive integers. The question is therefore simplified to:- "Which is bigger 15 or 12" - the answer is then self evident.
15/100. 1.5/1000 .15/10000 .015/100000 .0015/1000000 .00015/10000000 .000015/100000000 .0000015/1000000000 Yeahhh.
0.0015 = 0.0015 / 1.0000 Cancek down the decimal point Hence 00015/10000 Drop the prefix zeroes. 15/10000 Cancel down by '5' 3/2000 NB We note that the original decimal has four decimal places, so the denominating decimal MUST have '1 point' AND FOUR zeroes.
decimal
It is a number with a decimal point. It is not necessarily a decimal number because 24 (no decimal pont) is a decimal number.It is a number with a decimal point. It is not necessarily a decimal number because 24 (no decimal pont) is a decimal number.It is a number with a decimal point. It is not necessarily a decimal number because 24 (no decimal pont) is a decimal number.It is a number with a decimal point. It is not necessarily a decimal number because 24 (no decimal pont) is a decimal number.