Answer:
No
Step-by-step explanation:
A rational number is a number that can be expressed as a fraction p/q where p and q are integers and q!=0. A rational number p/q is said to have numerator p and denominator q. Numbers that are not rational are called irrational numbers. The real line consists of the union of the rational and irrational numbers. The set of rational numbers is of measure zero on the real line, so it is "small" compared to the irrationals and the continuum.
The set of all rational numbers is referred to as the "rationals," and forms a field that is denoted Q. Here, the symbol Q derives from the German word Quotient, which can be translated as "ratio," and first appeared in Bourbaki's Algèbre (reprinted as Bourbaki 1998, p. 671).
Any rational number is trivially also an algebraic number.
Examples of rational numbers include -7, 0, 1, 1/2, 22/7, 12345/67, and so on. Farey sequences provide a way of systematically enumerating all rational numbers.
The set of rational numbers is denoted Rationals in the Wolfram Language, and a number x can be tested to see if it is rational using the command Element[x, Rationals].
The elementary algebraic operations for combining rational numbers are exactly the same as for combining fractions.
It is always possible to find another rational number between any two members of the set of rationals. Therefore, rather counterintuitively, the rational numbers are a continuous set, but at the same time countable.
Answer:
5:25 ; 1:5
Step-by-step explanation:
there's 5/25 at a table. replace the slash with a colon.
5:25. Then simplify, getting 1:5
Answer:
selected the correct ones in bold
Step-by-step explanation:
The diameter is used in the formula. The units are always squared. The area can be found when given the diameter by first finding the radius. The area is the distance around the circle. Circumference can be used to find area.
Answer:
Step-by-step explanation:
Given that 1/4 bucket of nuts fills 2/3 of the barrel
PART A
<u>To find the amount of nuts that fills entire basket we can put this as:</u>
- 1/4 bucket → 2/3 barrel
- x bucket → 1 barrel
<u>Use cross-multiplication to find the value of x:</u>
- x×2/3 = 1×1/4
- x = 1/4 ÷ 2/3
- x = 1/4×3/2
- x = 3/8 bucket
PART B
- Using the bucket to barrel ratio to solve the problem. Having the number of required buckets as x and considering full barrel as 1 helps to find the value of x.
Tax she will pay would be $2.04