Any decimal that starts 2.07 and the next digit (thousandths) is 0-4, and if the thousandths digit is 0, is followed by a non-zero digit at some stage. eg 2.07000000000000000000000000000000000001, 2.074999999999999999, 2.074 are all greater than 2.07 and less than 2.075
No. Look at the first digit after the decimal point, which is the first digit other than zero, and compare those.
3.1You look at the second digit after the decimal point and ask if it is greater than or equal to 5.If it is you round up the first digit after the decimal point. If not, then you round down (i.e. the first digit after the decimal point stays as it was).So for 3.077, "7" is greater than or equal to five so we round up to 3.1 (to one decimal place).
Yes, 0.0069 is greater than 0.0068. When comparing decimals, you start by looking at the digits to the left of the decimal point. In this case, both numbers have the same digit (0), so you move to the first decimal place. The digit in the first decimal place is 0.0069 is 9, which is greater than 8 in 0.0068. Therefore, 0.0069 is greater than 0.0068.
Since the whole parts are equal, take a look at the FIRST DECIMAL DIGIT - the first digit after the decimal point. The larger number is the one that has the larger digit in this position.
100 i guess actually, 1.01
To determine if 1.8 is greater than 1.53 as a decimal, we compare the two numbers digit by digit from left to right. In this case, the first digit after the decimal point in 1.8 is 8, while the first digit after the decimal point in 1.53 is 5. Since 8 is greater than 5, 1.8 is indeed greater than 1.53 as a decimal.
No. A decimal number is simply a way of representing a number in such a way that the place value of each digit is ten times that of the digit to its right. A decimal representation does not require a decimal point. It can be greater than, equal to or less than 1.
It is 9 times greater.
No, 8.33 is greater than 8.3. When comparing decimal numbers, you look at the digits to the right of the decimal point. In this case, the digit in the hundredths place in 8.33 is greater than the digit in the tenths place in 8.3. Therefore, 8.33 is greater than 8.3.
No, 3.8 is not greater than 3.89. In the decimal system, the digit to the right of the decimal point represents a smaller value than the digit to the left. So in this case, the digit 8 in 3.8 represents 8 tenths, while the digit 9 in 3.89 represents 9 hundredths. Therefore, 3.89 is greater than 3.8.
To determine which number is greater between 0.002 and 0.009, we must compare their decimal values place by place. In this case, 0.009 is greater than 0.002 because the first nonzero digit after the decimal point in 0.009 is 9, which is greater than the first nonzero digit after the decimal point in 0.002, which is 2. Therefore, 0.009 is greater than 0.002.
Yes, unless the 3 digit number is negative, or a decimal.
You use a number of rules:* Positive numbers are greater than negative numbers. To compare two positive numbers: * The number more digits to the left of the decimal point is larger. For example, 200 is greater than 27. * If there is no whole part (no part left of the decimal point), the one with less zeros after the decimal point is larger. For example, 0.03 is greater than 0.0005. * If both of the above are the same, the number which has the largest digit for the first non-zero digit (from the left) is largest. For example, 0.03 is greater than 0.029. * If this first non-zero digit from the left is the same, compare the second digit. If those are the same, compare the third digit, etc. For example, 0.02556 is greater than 0.02541. For negative numbers, the rules above give you the SMALLER number. For example, -0.3 is less than -0.02.
Any decimal that starts 2.07 and the next digit (thousandths) is 0-4, and if the thousandths digit is 0, is followed by a non-zero digit at some stage. eg 2.07000000000000000000000000000000000001, 2.074999999999999999, 2.074 are all greater than 2.07 and less than 2.075
0.5 is greater. For positive decimal numbers with only 0 to the left of the decimal point, whichever number, if either, has the larger digit immediately to the right of the decimal point is larger. If the numbers have the same digit immediately to the right of the decimal point, apply the same test to the successive digits after the decimal points until one with a distinction is found; the larger of the first distinctive digit after the decimal point is in the larger number.
No. Look at the first digit after the decimal point, which is the first digit other than zero, and compare those.