Move the decimal point to the right, by as many digits as the exponent. Examples (using "^" for "power"): 5.3 times 10^3 = 5300 (note the implicit decimal point at the end) 1.2784 x 10^2 = 127.84 5 x 10^4 = 50000 etc. And for negative powers, move the decimal point to the left, for example: 5.3 x 10^(-3) = 0.0053
By using a metric tape measure
It is easy: just convert to decimal fractions.
You need to make a complete circuit to test continuity. If the transformer neutral is grounded then you can use just one end of a wire. Measure the wire end to ground will check continuity of the wire. The reading will follow the wire back to the ground point of the transformer there by forming a circuit that can be measured as open or closed. Using this procedure, the power can be shut off and the reading will be taken using the meters power.
Using factual reasoning refers to trying to prove a point objectively and logic. For instance, using statistics, anecdotes, expert opinions and so on.
a decimal point is a point that looks like a period
I need to put the decimal point somewhere!Look at that decimal!
It is called a [decimal] fraction.
No, because when using a whole numberyou don't have to use a decimal point.
Using a decimal, of course. All you need do is move the decimal point two places to the right.
Without a decimal point, six can. With a decimal point, eighteen can.
six point two or six decimal point two or six decimal place two
1.875
1.5
No. They use the Decimal Metric System (meters, kilograms, litres).
To convert between metric units using the decimal jump method, you move the decimal point a certain number of places to the left or right depending on the relationship between the units. For example, to convert from centimeters to meters, you would move the decimal point two places to the left. For conversions between units like grams and kilograms, you would move the decimal point three places to the left.
Always. To convert a decimal to a percentage, all you need to do is to move the decimal point two places to the right.