The fraction then is written in its simplest form
A fraction is in its simplest form when the GCF of the numerator and the denominator is 1.
Percent means out of 100. So a percentage can be written as a fraction over a denominator of 100. An improper fraction is when the numerator is greater than the denominator. ⇒ Any percentage greater than 100 % will have an improper fraction equivalent.
The denominator.
-- Some fractions are equal to mixed numbers (example 4/3). Some are not ( example 2/3). -- The fraction can be re-written as a whole number only if its numerator is a multiple of its denominator. -- If its numerator is greater than its denominator but not a multiple of it, then the fraction can be re-written as a mixed number. -- If neither condition is true, then the fraction can't be re-written as either a mixed number or a whole number.
Nothing, there is no change, since you are multiplying by 9/9 = 1.
The numerator is greater than the denominator.
When the GCF of the numerator and the denominator is 1, the fraction is written in its simplest form.
A fraction is in its simplest form when the GCF of the numerator and the denominator is 1.
Percent means out of 100. So a percentage can be written as a fraction over a denominator of 100. An improper fraction is when the numerator is greater than the denominator. ⇒ Any percentage greater than 100 % will have an improper fraction equivalent.
The denominator.
All rational numbers can be written as one integer (the numerator) over another integer (the denominator). If the numerator is less than the denominator, it is a vulgar (or common) fraction. If the denominator is 1, then only the numerator may be written in which case it may take the form of a whole number, eg 5/1 can also be written as 5. If the numerator equals the denominator, the fraction can be simplified to 1/1 which would be written as the whole number 1. If the numerator is greater than the denominator, then it is an improper (or top heavy) fraction and can be written as a mixed number which is a whole number along with a proper fraction (with the original denominator), eg 5/3 can also be written as 12/3 The denominator can be any non-zero integer, ie zero is not allowed to be the denominator of any fraction.
That would be the numerator. The numerator is above the denominator. The numerator divided by the denominator would be equal to the quotient. So, numerator/denominator = quotient
The numerator is 1 and the denominator is 10. In fraction form, it is written as 1/10.
A proper fraction is a fraction whose numerator is less than its denominator, meaning its value is less than 1. An improper fraction is one whose numerator is greater than its denominator, meaning its value is more than 1. An improper fraction can always be written as a mixed number ... an integer plus a proper fraction.
If the GCF of the numerator and the denominator is 1, the fraction is in its simplest form.
Divide the denominator into the numerator. Multiply the result by 100.
yes