Suppose n is a whole number and the fraction is 1/d where d is also a whole number.
Then n / (1/d) = n * (d/1) = n*d
For example, 7 / (1/5) = 7*(5/1) = 7*5 = 35
You do an integer division. The result of the division will be the whole number; put the remainder above the second number (the number you are dividing by). Simplify the resulting fraction in the usual way.
you have to put a one under that number and then rewrite it and when dividing you actually multiply and maybe simplify if not then your done.
Invert the fraction and multiply.
By dividing both the numerator and denominator by the same number is like dividing by 1.
By dividing the denominator into the numerator
When dividing a whole number by a fraction with a numerator of 1, you can think of the division as a fraction divided by a fraction. To find the quotient, you can multiply the whole number by the reciprocal of the fraction (flipping the fraction), which is essentially the same as multiplying by the fraction's denominator. This process is based on the concept that division is the same as multiplication by the reciprocal.
You do an integer division. The result of the division will be the whole number; put the remainder above the second number (the number you are dividing by). Simplify the resulting fraction in the usual way.
That would be the numerator. The numerator is above the denominator. The numerator divided by the denominator would be equal to the quotient. So, numerator/denominator = quotient
you have to put a one under that number and then rewrite it and when dividing you actually multiply and maybe simplify if not then your done.
Not necessarily.
Invert the fraction and multiply.
By dividing both the numerator and denominator by the same number is like dividing by 1.
By dividing the denominator into the numerator
The numerator of the fraction is '2'. The denominator of the fraction is the divisor (the number you were dividing by).
A quotient of integers is the result of dividing one integer by another. When dividing two integers, the result may be a whole number if the division is exact, or a decimal/fraction if there is a remainder. For example, when dividing 10 by 2, the quotient is 5, which is also an integer.
An expression that represents the quotient of a number and 7 can be written as "x/7" where x is the number. This expression signifies dividing the number x by 7. In algebraic terms, it represents a fraction where the numerator is the number being divided and the denominator is 7.
Divide the dividend until there is a remainder less than the divisor. The whole number quotient forms the whole number and the remainder over the divisor forms the fraction. Now simplify the fraction by dividing the numerator and denominator by any common factors (that are greater than 1). The mixed number result is the whole number and the simplified fraction together.