The digit '3' of course !
The value of any digit in the millions place is 1,000 times the value of the same digit in the thousands place.
The place value of a digit is its face value multiplied by its place column value (1, 10, 100, etc). To have the same place value and face value, the place column value must be 1 - the units column (immediately before the decimal point). Thus it is the last digit of a whole number, which in this case is the '8'.
The 4.
6
5.
The value of any digit in the millions place is 1,000 times the value of the same digit in the thousands place.
The place value of a digit is its face value multiplied by its place column value (1, 10, 100, etc). To have the same place value and face value, the place column value must be 1 - the units column (immediately before the decimal point). Thus it is the last digit of a whole number, which in this case is the '8'.
The 4.
6
The value of a digit: In 12,345 , the value of the digit 5 is 5 and the value of the digit 1 is 10,000. Place value: In 13,563 ,the place value of the digit 3 is thousands and the place value of the digit 6 is tens. The value of a digit is its value, as in 0-9 The place value of a digit is its value multiplied by its place (column) value which is dependant upon where it is in the number. In the units column, the place value is 1 In the tens column, it is 10 in the hundreds column it is 100 in the tenths column it is 1/10 So in 123.4: The digit 1 has value 1, but place value 1 x 100 = 100 (one hundred) since it is in the hundreds column The digit 2 has value 2, but place value 2 x 10 = 20 (twenty) since it is in the tens column The digit 3 has value 3, but place value 3 x 1 = 3 (three) since it is in the units column - in this case (only), its value and place value are the same. The digit 4 has value 4, but place value 4 x 1/10 = 4/10 (four tenths) since it is in the tenths column.
No. To compare numbers start with the highest place value digit and compare the place value digits in turn, moving one place value digit to the right each time; only if all the digits are the same are the two numbers the same, The highest place value digit between 80.6 and 8.06 is the tens digit: In 80.6 the tens digit is 8, but in 8.06 there is no tens digit, so it is taken as 0. Comparing the two 8 ≠ 0, so 80.6 ≠ 8.06 (In fact 80.6 is 8.06 × 10.)
5.
Don't make it more complicated than it is. The place value is decided only by how far the digit is from the decimal point. It has nothing to do with what digit is in it.
The places are always the same no matter what the digits are. The value is obtained by multiplying the place times the digit. Starting from the right, the places in an 8-digit number are ones, tens, hundreds, thousands, ten thousands, hundred thousands, millions and ten millions.
The ' 3 ' has. You don't even need to know what "place value" is to figure that out.
place value of 3 in the digit 635 is-30(because it is located in the tens place) & the place of the same is tens
The place value of the digit to the left is ten times greater.