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2007-05-22 17:13:58 · 5 answers · asked by madmax_noway 1 in Science & Mathematics Mathematics

Thank you.

2007-05-22 17:30:45 · update #1

5 answers

click this

http://www.gomath.com/htdocs/images/NewDecimals.gif

example:

2.3 = 2 3/10

2007-05-22 17:24:31 · answer #1 · answered by cutterpillow 2 · 0 0

It depends on your level of decimal. One decimal as in .2 would be 2 over 10. Add a 0 in the denominator for every spot. .02 is 2/100 .124 is 124/1000, etc. then reduce wherever you can.

2007-05-23 00:20:10 · answer #2 · answered by dandmeveritt 2 · 0 0

Best to consider a few examples:-
0.5 = 5 / 10 = 1 / 2
0.25 = 25 / 100 = 5 / 20 = 1 / 4
0.75 = 75 / 100 = 15 / 20 = 3 / 4
0.9 = 9 / 10
0 . 125 = 125 / 1000 = 25 / 200 = 5 / 40 = 1 / 8
Hope these may help.

2007-05-23 14:21:00 · answer #3 · answered by Como 7 · 1 0

It depends on how many digits after the decimal point.

For example, for 7.1, it will be 71 over 10, for 1.683, it will be 1683 over 1000. Just remember, one digit after the decimal point represent a zero. For 1.683, there is three digits after the decimal points, so you do it like this: 1683 over 1000. It doesn't matter if the number in front the decimal point is zero. For example 0.5, 0.89 etc.

Now please convert the following decimal numbers into fractions:
A, 1.2
B, 4.62
C, 7.8921
D, 0.8
E, 0.59
F, 0.123

2007-05-23 00:55:12 · answer #4 · answered by ilovethomas 2 · 1 0

I think you put the decimal over 100.

2007-05-23 00:19:01 · answer #5 · answered by Dianne T 3 · 0 0

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