In the NUMBER 923, there are 92 tens plus 3. In the NUMERAL 923, there are 9 hundreds, 2 tens, and 3 units.
That number would be 1,132.52
254 - has 2 hundreds, 5 tens, and 4 ones
what number has 9 hundreds, 2 fewer tens than hundreds, and 2 fewer ones than hundreds
Because the hundreds digit is less than 9, there will be no hundreds digit. There are 42 tens*, which is more than 9, so there will be a 10's digit in the answer. *(40 tens from 400, plus the 2 from the tens digit)
In the NUMBER 923, there are 92 tens plus 3. In the NUMERAL 923, there are 9 hundreds, 2 tens, and 3 units.
That number would be 1,132.52
200 + 150 + 19 = 369
254 - has 2 hundreds, 5 tens, and 4 ones
A. 2 thousands, 14 hundreds, 7 ones B. 3 thousands, 11 hundreds, 47 tens C. 3 thousands, 14 hundreds, 7 ones or..... D. 2 thousands, 11 hundreds, 47 ones
what number has 9 hundreds, 2 fewer tens than hundreds, and 2 fewer ones than hundreds
Because the hundreds digit is less than 9, there will be no hundreds digit. There are 42 tens*, which is more than 9, so there will be a 10's digit in the answer. *(40 tens from 400, plus the 2 from the tens digit)
Put the units in decreasing order. So: 5 ten thousands, 7 thousands, 6 hundreds, 3 tens, 2 ones. Since there are no missing units, the number is obtained by simply reading down the first characters: 57,632.
one
no is 240.0
There is no four digit number where the ones is twice the tens, the hundreds is five less than the ones, and the thousands is the sum of the tens and hundreds. int ones, tens, hundreds, thousands; for (thousands=1; thousands<10; thousands++) { /**/ for (hundreds=0; hundreds<10; hundreds++) { /**/ /**/ for (tens=0; tens<10; tens++) { /**/ /**/ /**/ for (ones=0; ones<10; ones++) { /**/ /**/ /**/ /**/ if (ones != 2 * tens) break; /**/ /**/ /**/ /**/ if (hundreds != ones - 5) break; /**/ /**/ /**/ /**/ if (thousands != tens + hundreds) break; /**/ /**/ /**/ /**/ printf ("dd\n", thousands, hundreds, tens, ones); /**/ /**/ /**/ } /**/ /**/ } /**/ } }
224 has.