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No, 0.3 is not greater than 0.7. In the decimal system, the placement of the digits to the right of the decimal point determines their value. In this case, 0.7 is greater than 0.3 because the digit 7 is in the tenths place, which is greater than the digit 3 in the tenths place of 0.3.
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).
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.