A decimal number is simply a way of representing a number in such a way that the place value of each digit is ten times that of the digit to its right. A decimal representation does not require a decimal point. So the required decimal representation is 88387097000000.
It is already a decimal in the form of 78.5
0.01
109,600,000 million
It would look like this: 9 602 11.3
It is 0.06
Well, honey, 1 million as a decimal is simply 1,000,000. It's not rocket science, just move the decimal point six places to the right and voilà, there you have it. Math can be a piece of cake when you break it down like that!
It is already a decimal in the form of 78.5
134,800,000 = 1.348*108 in standard form.
Oh, dude, writing 3.5 million in standard form is like a walk in the park. You just move the decimal point six places to the right because a million has six zeros. So, 3.5 million in standard form is 3,500,000. Easy peasy, lemon squeezy!
Oh, dude, writing 261 million in standard form is like super easy. You just move the decimal point 6 places to the right because a million has 6 zeros. So, 261 million in standard form is 261,000,000. Voila!
21 in decimal form can be 21.0 or 21.00 or 21.000, or however many zeros you'd like to write after the decimal point.
26,000,000, that's what 26 million looks like in number form.
% rate can be changed to decimal form. To convert % rate to decimal form: 1. Remove the % sign 2. Divide the given % by 100. Example: 25% = 0.25 in decimal
3.1415926 . . .
0.01
Oh, dude, 175 millionths in decimal form is 0.000175. It's like you take the number 175 and divide it by a million, which is a lot of dividing, but hey, that's math for you. So, yeah, 0.000175 is the fancy way to write it.
0.9 million in standard form is 900,000. This is because one million is equal to 1,000,000, so 0.9 million is 0.9 multiplied by 1,000,000, which equals 900,000. In standard form, numbers are expressed as a coefficient multiplied by a power of 10, with the decimal point placed after the first non-zero digit.