An example of a repeating decimal is the fraction 1/6. One sixth equals zero point one six six repeating.
33 1/3 = 33.333... (with the 3 repeating forever) The correct mathematical notation is to write 33 1/3 as 33.3 and put a dot over the 3 after the decimal point to show it repeats.
To find the 2001st digit in the repeating decimal for 1/7, we need to understand that 1/7 is a recurring decimal with a repeating pattern of 142857. Since the pattern length is 6 digits, we divide 2001 by 6 to get the remainder, which is 1. Therefore, the 2001st digit in the repeating decimal for 1/7 is the first digit in the repeating pattern, which is 1.
1/3 = 0.3333 . . . (repeating forever)
how do you write the Fraction as a decimal 1 over 12
It is 0.166... repeating.
3.33 repeating
2 over 3 is already a fraction number. This can be written as decimal as 0.667.
0.00740740 ... (repeating)
It is 0.0303... (repeating).
1/9 as a decimal is 0.'1' repeating '1'
An example of a repeating decimal is the fraction 1/6. One sixth equals zero point one six six repeating.
0.0666666, with 6 repeating.
2.11111 repeating
0.06666 repeating
0.16666 repeating
It is 1.527777... (repeating).