This is how you round a decimal to the leading digit. First a leading digit is the first number you come to that is not a zero. Lets say 0.0025 rounding it i would see that 2 is my first real number. okay so look next to it to see the 5 it tell you to round it up . so the 2 would become a 3 so it would look like. 0.003
The leading digit in a number is the digit to the most left. EXAMPLES: 1.09 the leading digit is 1. 298 leading digit 2.
1
To round 6.025 to three decimal places, we look at the digit in the fourth decimal place, which is 5. Since this digit is 5 or greater, we round up the last digit in the third decimal place by 1. Therefore, 6.025 rounded to three decimal places is 6.026.
To round 10.99557429 to one decimal place, you look at the digit in the tenths place, which is the second digit after the decimal point. In this case, the digit in the tenths place is 9. Since 9 is greater than or equal to 5, you round up the digit in the tenths place to the next higher number. Therefore, rounding 10.99557429 to one decimal place gives you 11.0.
A leading digit is the digit/number at the beggining of a decimal number or regular number and is the first number to the left.
Identify the leading digit of the decimal and then round to the leading digit. 0.00693
0.002
The leading digit in a number is the digit to the most left. EXAMPLES: 1.09 the leading digit is 1. 298 leading digit 2.
1
0.8To round to 1 decimal place we look at the second digit after the decimal point and ask if it is equal to or greater than 5. If it is we round the first digit up (add 1 to it). If not we round down (the first digit remains the same).Here the second digit is "6" and so we round the first digit up to "8".
To round 6.025 to three decimal places, we look at the digit in the fourth decimal place, which is 5. Since this digit is 5 or greater, we round up the last digit in the third decimal place by 1. Therefore, 6.025 rounded to three decimal places is 6.026.
3.1You look at the second digit after the decimal point and ask if it is greater than or equal to 5.If it is you round up the first digit after the decimal point. If not, then you round down (i.e. the first digit after the decimal point stays as it was).So for 3.077, "7" is greater than or equal to five so we round up to 3.1 (to one decimal place).
.07
It is 10000.
A decimal number is simply a way of representing a number in such a way that the place value of each digit is ten times that of the digit to its right. So, a decimal number will always round to a decimal number.
To round 10.99557429 to one decimal place, you look at the digit in the tenths place, which is the second digit after the decimal point. In this case, the digit in the tenths place is 9. Since 9 is greater than or equal to 5, you round up the digit in the tenths place to the next higher number. Therefore, rounding 10.99557429 to one decimal place gives you 11.0.
You round your answer to one decimal place.So if the digit in the second decimal place is more than 5 the digit in the first place is increased by 1.and if the digit in the second decimal place is less than 5 the digit in the first place is left unchanged.If the digit in the second place is 5 then you either go to the next decimal place. It it is 1 then you round up, if not then you round down.If the digit in the second decimal place is 5 and there are no more digits then many schools incorrectly advise you to round up. This is incorrect because it introduces a bias. The IEEE approved solution is the "round-to-even": round the number up or down so that the last digit remaining in the number is even.