Writing a number in standard form simply means to express the number in its 'normal' form. So the standard form of 100 is 100.
If you mean 3,000,000 then it is 1.0*10^6 in standard form or scientific notation
It means the number form of the exponent.
Oh, dude, the standard form of 36 is just 36. I mean, it's like asking what's the standard form of your name, you know? It's already in its simplest form. So yeah, 36 is just chillin' in its standard form, no need to overcomplicate things, man.
The standard for of 012 is just 12 - without the zero.If you mean .012 (some signs get eliminated in answers.com questions), that already IS the standard form.
Standard from is just the plain number itself. (ex) 24,971 is in standard form.
Standard form has nothing to do with increasing or decreasing.
50 and 10,000 are two numbers, so you probably mean 10,050. Standard form can mean two things, scientific form or standard form. The standard form is 10,050. the scientific form is 1.005 x 10^4.
If you mean "What's the standard form for million" the answer is 1,000,000,000 or 1000000000
Probably an incorrect spelling of "standard form".
If you mean 3,000,000 then in standard form or scientific notation it is 3.0*10^6
Writing a number in standard form simply means to express the number in its 'normal' form. So the standard form of 100 is 100.
If you mean 3,000,000 then it is 1.0*10^6 in standard form or scientific notation
If you mean y = 5x-13 then in standard form it is 5x-y-13 = 0
If you mean 8.53*10^-5 then its already in standard form for 0.0000853
If you mean 263.04 then it is 2.6304*10^2 in standard form or scientific notation
If you mean: 3,000,000 then in standard form or scientific notation it is 3.0*10^6