Calculating with numbers: Decimal numbers
Decimal numbers
Decimal number
A decimal number is a number in a decimal system with a decimal point: 2 is not a decimal number, but 2. and 2.0 is. The digits after the decimal point are called the decimals.
Mathematically, 2.1 is the same as 2.10 and 2.100, and so on, because an extra zero at the end does not change the value of the number. From a scientific point of view, the decimal numbers are different: then, numbers are often the results of measurements or calculations and the extra zeros indicate their accuracy.
Examples
Construction of a decimal number The decimal number consists of 1 hundred, 2 tens, 3 units, 4 tenths and 5 hundredths because
Moving the decimal point
Rounding
A decimal number can be rounded to a certain number of decimal places. Rounding up or down depends on the value of the next decimal. For example, when rounding to three decimal places, the value of the fourth decimal is decisive: if it is less than 5, it is rounded down, otherwise it is rounded up.
When rounding down, the decimal to which it is rounded remains the same. When rounding up, a 1 is added. If the relevant decimal is 9, then it becomes a 0 and the digit before it is increased by 1.
Rounding is indicated by using the approximate symbol .
Examples