0.1 If you round something to 1 decimal place, you can only have one number after the decimal point, eg 0.109 is 0.1 rounded to 1 decimal place 0.109 is 0.11 rounded to 2 decimal places
To round a number, the decimal place that you want to round to, needs to be specified. If you want to round to the tenths place or to 1 decimal place, then this number is already there: 7.7 is seven and seven tenths. If you want to round it to zero decimal places, or to the nearest whole number, then look at the tenths place and if it is 0-4 you round down to 7, if it is 5-9 (which it is) you round up to 8.
1, if you want to round it to the nearest whole number. For rounding it to the nearest tenth (one decimal place), the answer is 0.7. For rounding it to the nearest hundredth (two decimal places), the answer is 0.67. etc. When you round it to the nearest millionth (six decimal places), you'll no longer be rounding up, because the answer will be the same as what you started with: 0.666666.
147 is already rounded to 0 decimal places. But if you mst try to round it to 1 dp, is should be written as 147.0
6.5- you round it until it has one decimal.
1.3
0.0498Use your calculator to evaluate e-2. Round your answer to four decimal places and enter it below.0.1353Use your calculator to evaluatee-1. Round your answer to four decimal places and enter it below0.3679
It is 0.06 when rounded to two decimal places because the digit 1 is less than 5
You can't round on a calculator. You do it in your head. 4-1, you round down, 5-9, you round up.
1/3 = 1 ÷ 3 = 0.333... (with the 3 recurring). When rounding to any number of decimal places it will round down, so stop after as many 3s as decimal places to which you want to round. eg to 1 dp 1/3 ≈ 0.3 to 4 dp 1/3 ≈ 0.3333
The second decimal place is the 9. It is followed by a 1, which is less than 5, so we round it down to 1.39.
To round up 0.45 to 2 decimal places, you need to look at the third decimal place, which is 5 in this case. Since 5 is equal to or greater than 5, you round up the last digit in the second decimal place by adding 1. Therefore, 0.45 rounded to 2 decimal places would be 0.46.
This rounded up to 2 decimal places is 6.44 as the last number (7) is greater than 1-4
I think it is 0.27 but l don't know if that is correct.
The Young and the Restless - 1973 1-7065 was released on: USA: 2001
0.3679
Press MODE. The second line will say FLOAT and then have the numbers 1-9. If FLOAT is selected, the calculator will not round. If a number is selected, the calculator will round to that number of decimal places. For example, if you wanted to round everything to 3 decimal places, you would select "3". You can also use the round command. To get to it, press MATH, select NUM and the top and choose the second option, "round(". Type the number and then the decimal place you want to round to, separated by a comma. For example, if you wanted to round 2.569 to 2 decimal places, you would type round(2.569,2)