There is no difference between rounding up and rounding off. The only thing is that when you round off you drop some numbers.Like in 74,329 the 10,000 would be 70,000.
Since the question asks about rounding up rather than simply rounding, the answer is 3.97
Only if you are rounding up to the nearest dollar. Normal rounding rules would make it 40.
two answers, as 0.05 is in the middle 0.7 rounding down 0.8 rounding up
No, 4 goes down. When rounding anything less than five you round down. When rounding anything five or more you round up. 4 is less than 5 so you round down. Rounding 4 down would be 0.
An invoice is the statement you send to a customer.
the whole unit was calculated by rounding up
100 - 99.9999 without rounding up = 0.00010000000000331966
That depends on how you are rounding: Rounding up = 6.33 Rounding down = 6.32 Rounding nearest = 6.32
It is true (allowing for rounding).
It depends on what you are rounding to. If rounding to the nearest ten, the 9 at the end decides which way to round it, and being a 9, it rounds up. If rounding to the nearest hundred, it was is the 7. If rounding up to the nearest thousand, it is the 8.
157.48 cm = 157 cm (rounding down) or 158 cm (rounding up) 157.48 cm = 62 inches (rounding up) or 61 inches (rounding down)
There is no difference between rounding up and rounding off. The only thing is that when you round off you drop some numbers.Like in 74,329 the 10,000 would be 70,000.
Rounding in Visual Basic is the method of rounding an integer up, or flooring an integer, which is rounding down. To round up, you use the System.Math.Round function. To round down, or floor, you use the System.Math.Floor function.
A billing statement lists the charges that a customer has accumulated over a period of time. This allows the customer or receiver of the billing statement to keep track of his or her financial activity.
to screw the customer
You can know your Custer motor ID by looking at your monthly statement. The customer ID is always at the upper left-hand corner of the customer statement.