No. In normal mathematical usage the term factor refers to an integer that goes into another integer without remainder. There is, therefore, no need for a decimal place.
No. In normal mathematical usage the term factor refers to an integer that goes into another integer without remainder. There is, therefore, no need for a decimal place.
No. In normal mathematical usage the term factor refers to an integer that goes into another integer without remainder. There is, therefore, no need for a decimal place.
No. In normal mathematical usage the term factor refers to an integer that goes into another integer without remainder. There is, therefore, no need for a decimal place.
The number of decimal places in the product must equal the total number of decimal places in the factors. John's product should have 2 decimal places.
two.
Two places.
You need to add up the number of digits to the right of the decimal to find the number of digits in the answer. If the first factor has 2 digits to the right of the decimal point and the second factor has 3, the final answer will have 5 digits to the right of the decimal point.
The answer depends on why you move the decimal point to the right. In the context of scientific notation, you increase the exponent by the number of place that the decimal place is moved.
The number of decimal places in the product must equal the total number of decimal places in the factors. John's product should have 2 decimal places.
Two of them.
explain why it is important to line up decimal numbers by their place value when you add or subtract them
two.
Two places.
It is a decimal because the fraction 3/5 when converted into a decimal is 0.6. The denominator is the decimal's place and the numerator is the number. 5 x 2 = 10 for the tenths place and 3x2 is 6 for the number.
You need to add up the number of digits to the right of the decimal to find the number of digits in the answer. If the first factor has 2 digits to the right of the decimal point and the second factor has 3, the final answer will have 5 digits to the right of the decimal point.
To read the decimal 8.79, you read it eight and seventy-nine hundredths because after the decimal, there are two place values. The first is tenths and the second is hundredths. Since the last number, 9, is in the hundredth place, the whole decimal would be read as a hundredth.
The answer depends on why you move the decimal point to the right. In the context of scientific notation, you increase the exponent by the number of place that the decimal place is moved.
It will be two places from the end.
It will be two places.
decimal place