It is called the digit in the first decimal place.
You write it as 0.004 because to the left of the decimal point is ones, to the first zero to the right of the decimal point is tenths, to the second zero to the right of the decimal point is hundredths, and so on.
After the decimal point, the first place has the greatest value,and there's no such thing as the smallest one.Before the decimal point, the first place has the smallest value,and there's no such thing as the greatest one.
No - the first digit after the decimal point represents tenths, while the second digit after the decimal point represents hundredths.
Pi to 144 decimal places is written thus: 3.14159265358979323846264338327950288419716939937510 58209749445923078164062862089986280348253421170679 82148086513282306647093844609550582231725359 The sum of these first 144 decimal digits (after the decimal point) is 666.
The first to the right of the decimal point.
The first place to the right of the decimal point.
The first digit after the decimal point.
First there's the 3 before the decimal point, and then, after the decimal point, comes 14159 26535 8979.
Tenth
the decimal point moves forward
It is called the digit in the first decimal place.
The first place to the right of the decimal place is tenths
You write it as 0.004 because to the left of the decimal point is ones, to the first zero to the right of the decimal point is tenths, to the second zero to the right of the decimal point is hundredths, and so on.
Tenths is the first place to the right of the decimal point. Hundredths is the second place to the right of the decimal point.
The first place after the decimal point is tenths. The second place after the decimal point is hundredths The third place after the decimal point is thousandths. So the number must extend to the third place after the decimal.
0.6