You simply just round up. ;)
Yes the mean can have a remainder but the remainder would normally be either rounded or converted into a fraction.
You incorporate the fractional remainder into the mean. The mean does not have to be a whole number.
0.12
Done the calculation (get the answer) and also show the remainder (don't round up or down).
U round it up
a group or part that are left
In the context of calculating a mean (average), there is no remainder in the traditional sense. The mean is computed by summing a set of values and dividing by the number of values, resulting in a single numerical value. If the total sum is not evenly divisible by the number of values, the mean may include a decimal or a fraction, but this is not considered a remainder like in division.
If you mean 60 divided by 12 then it is exactly 5 with no remainder.
It means what's left over after a division as for example 18/5 = 3 with a remainder of 3
If you mean evenly (with no fraction or decimal part or remainder) the answer is no. When it's divided by 36, the remainder is 18.
Do you mean what, when divided by 2, leaves a remainder? That'd be any odd number (or fraction).
The mean can be an improper fraction but it cannot have a remainder.