No.
eg 20 ÷ 133 = 0.1503759... which has infinitely many digits
No.
No, the quotient does not always have the same number of digits when dividing a three-digit number by a one-digit number. The number of digits in the quotient depends on the specific values involved. For instance, dividing 100 by 5 results in a quotient of 20 (two digits), while dividing 999 by 3 results in a quotient of 333 (three digits). Thus, the digit count can vary based on the numbers used in the division.
3
10.3333
they are the same they are both 9
A dividend is is a number to be divided and a divisor is a number to be divided into a dividend. Here the dividend is a three digit number and is divided by a one digit divisor. The quotient or result is a two digit number as stated. So in math terms, we can state that the dividend is a three digit number and that the divisor is a one digit number.
2 or 3 digits.
No.
-2
3
It does not have to be. 864/2 = 432. The first digit of the quotient is not in the tens place.
34
Unless you are using remainders, no because the divisor may not divide evenly into the dividend you idiots.
500. The smallest 3 digit quotient is 100, so 5 x 100 = 500.
10.3333
208
No it yields a quotient of 2 1/3 or 2.3333333...