25 can go into 40 once, so we write a 1 in the tenths position of our quotient, multiply 1 by 25 to get 25, and subtract that from 40. Our difference is 15. Bring down another 0, so 15 appears as 150. We know 25*6 = 150 so we can put a 6 in the hundredths position of...
Example 4: converting with a recurring decimal (in the tenths and hundredths column) Convert 0.\dot{2}\dot{3} to a fraction Equate the recurring decimal to a variable to create Equation 1 Multiply both sides of Equation 1 by a power of 10 to create Equation 2 Subtract Equation 2 ...
Decimals to Fractions (2 of 3) e.g. tenths, hundredths, thousandths, with simplifyingSimilar to the above listing, the resources below are aligned to related standards in the Common Core For Mathematics that together support the following learning outcome:Understand...