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A rational number can be written as the ratio of one blank to another and can be represented by a repeating or blank decimal

User Yname
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2 Answers

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A rational number can be written in the form:


(p)/(q); \ called \ the \ ratio \\ \\ where \ p \ and \ q \ are \ whole \ numbers

The number
$q$ isn't equal to zero because the division by zero is not defined. So we can represent rational numbers by a repeating or terminating decimal, for instance in the following four exercises we have:


(2)/(3)=0.6666...=0.\stackrel{\frown}{6} \\ \\ (5)/(8)=0.625000...=0.625\stackrel{\frown}{0} \\ \\ (3)/(1)=3.000...=3.\stackrel{\frown}{0} \\ \\ (3446)/(2475)=1.392323...=1.39\stackrel{\frown}{23}
User ProjectJourneyman
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5 votes

we know that

A rational number is the quotient of two integers with a denominator that is not zero , and can be represented by a repeating or terminating decimal.

Repeating Decimal is a decimal number that has digits that go on forever

Terminating decimal is a decimal number that has digits that do not go on forever.

examples


(1)/(3) = 0.333... (the
3 repeats forever)----> Is a Repeating Decimal


0.25 (it has two decimal digits)----> Is a Terminating Decimal

therefore

the answer is

A rational number can be written as the ratio of one
integer
to another and can be represented by a repeating or
terminating
decimal

User Avicohen
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7.9k points