On a standard ruler, 2.39 inches would fall between the 2-inch mark and the 3-inch mark. Each inch on a ruler is typically divided into 16 equal parts, known as sixteenths. So, 2.39 inches would be just past the 2 3/8 inch mark and slightly before the 2 7/16 inch mark on the ruler.
3.166667 inches is 3.166667 inches, whether on a ruler or anywhere else.
Depends on the length of the ruler A 6 inch ruler would show 6 whole inches A 12 inch ruler would show 12 whole inches.
On the Imperial Scale Rule ; it is divided into 12 inches, which is 1 foot.
12 inches, which is 1 foot which is the size of a ruler.
It is 2/10 past the one inch mark on a ruler.
There are 2 inches between the 5 and 7 marks on a ruler.
On a standard ruler, 2.39 inches would fall between the 2-inch mark and the 3-inch mark. Each inch on a ruler is typically divided into 16 equal parts, known as sixteenths. So, 2.39 inches would be just past the 2 3/8 inch mark and slightly before the 2 7/16 inch mark on the ruler.
It is 2.25 inches - whether on a ruler or on a measuring tape or whatever.
The average size for a pen is about 5.5 inches, for a pencil is about 7 inches, for a ruler is about 12 inches, for a rubber (eraser) is about 2 inches, and for a sharpener is about 2 inches in length.
24 inches
1.2 inches is equivalent to 1 and 2/10 inches on some rulers
Where is 0.71 inches on the ruler
A 30cm ruler is about 12 inches. so 90cm is 36 inches + 2 so about 38 inches
It is 3/10 of an inch before 2 inches on the ruler
scale
Whether on a ruler or anywhere else, it is still 1.35 inches. No ruler is graduated with at that level of detail. A tenth of an inch is typical. So you want a point halfway between 1.3 inches and 1.4 inches. Alternatively, you can draw a line of 1.35*2 = 2.7 inches (the ruler will measure that) and then bisect it.