You can't divide by zero. 3/4 is 3 divided by 4 or 0.75.
7/4 is 7 divided by 4 or 1.75
The fraction with the smaller denominator has fewer pieces in the whole. So each piece must be bigger.
Divide the denominator into the numerator. Multiply that total by 100. 3/4 = 0.75 = 75%
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.
can you explain fraction patterns
No, by the very definition of rational it can be a fraction with only integers. Common sense would suggest that since irrational means not rational that is impossible.
divide the numerator by the denominator
The fraction with the smaller denominator has fewer pieces in the whole. So each piece must be bigger.
By dividing both the numerator and denominator by the same number is like dividing by 1.
3/8 = 6/16 by multiplying the numerator and denominator by 2
Multiply the denominator by the whole number. Add the numerator to that total. Put that sum over the original denominator.
First find a common denominator. Then, add the numerators together. Simplify if possible.
Divide the denominator into the numerator. Multiply that total by 100. 3/4 = 0.75 = 75%
A proper fraction can represent a comparison between a part (the numerator) and the whole (the denominator).
To convert a mixed number to an improper fraction, multiply the denominator by the whole number, add that total to the numerator and put the whole thing over the original denominator. 147 and 3/10 = 1473/10
It appears to be a complex fraction. Without some grouping symbols to explain which part of the larger fraction (numerator or denominator) has the fraction in it there is no way to simplify it.
A fraction multiplied by its reciprocal is always equal to one. This is because the reciprocal is an inversion of the fraction. The denominator of a fraction is the same number as the numerator of the reciprocal, and vice versa. The product of this is a fraction with the same numbers for the denominator and reciprocal, which is also known as an equivalent fraction. Equivalent fractions are always equal to one.
To convert a fraction to a decimal, divide the numerator (top number) by the denominator (bottom number). For example, 1/2 (one half) is 1 ÷ 2 = 0.5