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CHAPTER 17 Decimals & Percents
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DECIMALS We operate numerically within a base-ten number system. The basic idea revolves around the idea that each place value is connected to the next with a 10 to 1 ratio. Example: 10 ones makes 1 ten Example: 100 ones makes 1 hundred Example: 234 is 234 ones, 23 tens and 4 ones, and 2 hundreds and 3 tens and 4 ones. This extends infinitely in both directions along a continuum. As we move to the left on this continuum, we multiply by 10. To the right, we divide by 10. This motivates the usage of a decimal point. A decimal point marks the position of the unit. Example: 24.12 represent 24 ones, 1 tenth and 2 one-hundreths. We will model this using the blocks.
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PRACTICE PROBLEMS Determine the decimal equivalents to the following fractions. Draw a model. 3/10 1/2 1/4 7/4 3/8 Determine the decimal equivalents to the following fractions. Draw a model. 1/5 1/3 1/9 4/9
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TERMINATING, INFINITE REPEATING, AND INFINITE NON-REPEATING DECIMALS Real numbers that have terminating or infinite repeating decimal expansions possess fraction equivalents. Examples: 1/3 =.3333… Examples: 2/5 =.4 Real numbers that have infinite non-repeating decimal expansions do not possess fraction equivalents. Example: Pi = 3.14159265358979323846264… Examples: Square root of 2 = 1.4142135623730950488016887242096…
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