When the remainder is zero the answer is a whole number. Put that number over 1 for an improper fraction.
zero.
any fraction
The answer depends on the part of the question that is missing.
No. The reason you can multiply a fraction by (x/x) to find an equivalent fraction is because for almost any x, (x/x) = 1. This is not the case for zero. Zero divided by zero does NOT equal 1, so multiplying the fraction by a value not equal to 1 will create a different fraction.
When the remainder is zero the answer is a whole number. Put that number over 1 for an improper fraction.
To convert a remainder into a fraction, you can simply place the remainder over the divisor. For example, if you have a remainder of 2 when dividing 7 by 3, you can express it as 2/3. To convert the remainder into a decimal, divide the remainder by the divisor. In the same example, dividing 2 by 3 would give you 0.666... or 0.67 when rounded to two decimal places.
Any fraction that has a zero as the numerator equals zero. Any fraction that does not have a zero in the numerator would be a nonzero fraction.
The fraction is zero. 0 divided by anything except zero is zero.
The rule is if the numerator is zero than the value of the fraction is zero.
put a 1 under the decimal and then a zero for every number after the zero, you get 7/1000 which can't be simplified so that is the answer.
"Zero point" is 0. It is an integer, not a fraction.
-9 over anything but zero is a fraction. Division by zero is undefined.
You can't change a fraction when the numerator is zero because no matter what the denominator is the fraction is still zero. A zero denominator is not allowed because you cannot divide by zero.
Zero
No.
It is any fraction whose numerator is zero and denominator is not zero.