It depends on the degree of rounding: To the nearest integer: 299.5 To the nearest ten: 295 To the nearest 30: 285 To the nearest hundred: 250 Essentially, it is 300 minus one half of the unit that you are rounding to.
295
295
To the nearest ten it is 80
To the nearest ten it is 570. To the nearest hundred it is 600.
300,000
300
The answer depends on the degree of rounding. To the nearest unit (integer), 299.5 To the nearest ten: 295 To the nearest fifty: 275 To the nearest N : 300 - N/2
Anything from 295 to 304.
295 to the nearest hundreds place = 300
It depends on the degree of rounding: To the nearest integer: 299.5 To the nearest ten: 295 To the nearest 30: 285 To the nearest hundred: 250 Essentially, it is 300 minus one half of the unit that you are rounding to.
295
295
Six to the nearest ten is ten. Three to the nearest ten is zero.
The result is 300.
It is 280 (according to IEEE standard 754). Unfortunately, many schools teach that 5 and higher numbers should be rounded up and 4s and lower rounded down. Unfortunately that method introduces a systematic upward bias.
Ten less than 305 is 295.