Moving the decimal over one space to the left. (9.852)
Explanation:
If you multiply a decimal by 10 the decimal point will move one space to the right to make a bigger number. But, if you divide by 10, it will move one space to the left to make a smaller number. (÷ means left, x means right) The The rule is, however many 0’s you have after the 1, that is how many spaces you move your decimal point. For an example if I wanted to multiply or divide a decimal by 100, I would move the decimal point 2 spaces over instead of just one because the number 100 had two 0’s after the one.This rule will not work with numbers like 20, or 150, because they are not multiples of 10 like the other numbers. Numbers that will work are 10, 100, 1000, 10000, 100000 and so on.
Sorry this is so long, I just wanted to make sure you understand because I had trouble with it when I was learning it.
Answer:
She can play 7 games
Step-by-step explanation:
Substrate 4 from 25
Answer: 0.16$
Step-by-step explanation: You would do 1.99 divided by 12 because 12 equals to a dozen, 1.99 divided by 12 to get 0.16 cents.
<h3>
Answer: 10.7</h3>
Work Shown:
5 times 2 = 10
5 times 13 = 65
5 times 2.13 = 10.65
This rounds to <u>10.7</u> when rounding to the nearest tenth, i.e. one decimal place.
Answer:
We can conclude that on this case we have identical processes but excersise 17 use another way to present the probability distribution and as we can see the expected value can be viewed as a dot product of two vectors with one vector containing the outcomes and the other the probabilities for each possible outcome.
Step-by-step explanation:
Assuming this previous info:
Exercise 17. Suppose that we convert the table on the previous page displaying the discrete distribution for the number of heads occurring when two coins are flipped to two vectors.
Let vector