When you divide a decimal number by a power of ten, the decimal point moves to the left by as many places as the exponent of ten indicates. For example, dividing by 10 moves the decimal point one place left, dividing by 100 moves it two places left, and so on. This pattern effectively reduces the value of the decimal number. Conversely, multiplying by a power of ten moves the decimal point to the right.
Convert the mixed number to a decimal and proceed.
divide it. divide top number by bottom number. You will get a decimal number
You can divide 31 by any number. But because it is a prime number, the answer will always be a decimal.
no because if you divide this number by 3 it will give u a decimal number
What you must first do is find the decimal version of a fraction is to divide the denominator into the numerator (for you simple folk, you divide the bottom number into the top number.)
Convert the mixed number to a decimal and proceed.
Divide the number by 100
Divide the numerator (the top number) by the denominator (the bottom number) and you will get a decimal number.
divide it. divide top number by bottom number. You will get a decimal number
Divide the fraction then put the whole number at the front of the decimal.
You can divide 31 by any number. But because it is a prime number, the answer will always be a decimal.
no because if you divide this number by 3 it will give u a decimal number
It is the amount obtained when you divide the decimal number by 2.
You may or you may not. If you divided by a decimal number that is greater than 1 then you will get a smaller number whereas if you divide by a number less than 1 then you will get a larger number.
To turn any fraction into a decimal you divide the top number by the bottom number. For 1/3 divide 1 by 3
What you must first do is find the decimal version of a fraction is to divide the denominator into the numerator (for you simple folk, you divide the bottom number into the top number.)
You round