Price of a gallon is $2.009. the third digit after the decimal is for 9/10 of a gallon. You are not paying for a gallon of gas. You are paying for 9/10 a gallon of gas. Sometimes you will see 9/10 after the cost of gas.
Since there are 3 digits after the decimal, divide by 1000 (103):925 / 1000Then see if you can simplify.Since there are 3 digits after the decimal, divide by 1000 (103):925 / 1000Then see if you can simplify.Since there are 3 digits after the decimal, divide by 1000 (103):925 / 1000Then see if you can simplify.Since there are 3 digits after the decimal, divide by 1000 (103):925 / 1000Then see if you can simplify.
You need to add up the number of digits to the right of the decimal to find the number of digits in the answer. If the first factor has 2 digits to the right of the decimal point and the second factor has 3, the final answer will have 5 digits to the right of the decimal point.
It is. It terminates after 3 digits!
Three. This refers to the number of significant digits AFTER the decimal point.
Neither. The number of digits after the decimal point is a measure of the accuracy, not magnitude.
Since there are 3 digits after the decimal, divide by 1000 (103):925 / 1000Then see if you can simplify.Since there are 3 digits after the decimal, divide by 1000 (103):925 / 1000Then see if you can simplify.Since there are 3 digits after the decimal, divide by 1000 (103):925 / 1000Then see if you can simplify.Since there are 3 digits after the decimal, divide by 1000 (103):925 / 1000Then see if you can simplify.
It only has 3 digits
You need to add up the number of digits to the right of the decimal to find the number of digits in the answer. If the first factor has 2 digits to the right of the decimal point and the second factor has 3, the final answer will have 5 digits to the right of the decimal point.
It is. It terminates after 3 digits!
The digits from 0 to 9, and the decimal point (or comma, depending on the country).The digits from 0 to 9, and the decimal point (or comma, depending on the country).The digits from 0 to 9, and the decimal point (or comma, depending on the country).The digits from 0 to 9, and the decimal point (or comma, depending on the country).
I was gas station attendant in '81 when pumps first required changeover to 3 digits per gallon(when it first hit 1.00 per gallon for hi-test). By the year 2002 gas was still close to one dollar or 1.20 per gallon for regular. There wasn't a whole lotta fluctuation for those 20 or so years... all over now.
Three. This refers to the number of significant digits AFTER the decimal point.
Neither. The number of digits after the decimal point is a measure of the accuracy, not magnitude.
5.2632
0.6666666... (with infinitely many digits).
the answer is it stays in the same place.* * * * *Not quite.Suppose you want to multiply two decimal numbers A and B. Multiply the two numbers ignoring the decimal points.Count the number of digits after the decimal point in the number A.Count the number of digits after the decimal point in the number B.Add these two numbers together. This is the number of digits you want after the decimal point in the answer. So count back from the end.Example:2.54 * 3.5 (this is number of centimetres in 3.5 inches)254*35 = 8890Number of digits after the decimal point in 2.54 is 2 (5 and 4).Number of digits after the decimal point in 3.5 is 1 (5).2 + 1 = 3 so there must be 3 digits after the decimal point in the answer.Therefore 8890 becomes 8.890NOW, you can simplify it to 8.89
3.5 x0.72 Initially ignore the decimal points. Think 35 x 72 = 2520 Since there are three digits to the right of the decimal point as 0.72 ( 2 digits) and 3.5 ( 1 digit) 2 duguts + 1 digits = 3 digits. So the answer MUST have 3 digits to the right of the decimal point. Hence 2520 becomes 2.520 The answer!!!!!