What can I do?

226349 materialEducativo

textoFiltroFicha
  • I like 0
  • Visits 0
  • Comments 0
  • Save to
  • Actions

About this resource...

Repeating decimal
Dbpedia
Wikipedia articleDbpedia source
A repeating decimal or recurring decimal is decimal representation of a number whose digits are periodic (repeating its values at regular intervals) and the infinitely repeated portion is not zero. It can be shown that a number is rational if and only if its decimal representation is repeating or terminating (i.e. all except finitely many digits are zero). For example, the decimal representation of 1/3 becomes periodic just after the decimal point, repeating the single digit "3" forever, i.e. 0.333.... A more complicated example is 3227/555, whose decimal becomes periodic at the second digit following the decimal point and then repeats the sequence "144" forever, i.e. 5.8144144144.... At present, there is no single universally accepted for repeating decimals. The infinitely repeated digit sequence is called the repetend or reptend. If the repetend is a zero, this decimal representation is called a terminating decimal rather than a repeating decimal, since the zeros can be omitted and the decimal terminates before these zeros. Every terminating decimal representation can be written as a decimal fraction, a fraction whose denominator is a power of 10 (e.g. 1.585 = 1585/1000); it may also be written as a ratio of the form k/2n5m (e.g. 1.585 = 317/2352). However, every number with a terminating decimal representation also trivially has a second, alternative representation as a repeating decimal whose repetend is the digit 9. This is obtained by decreasing the final (rightmost) non-zero digit by one and appending a repetend of 9. 1.000... = 0.999... and 1.585000... = 1.584999... are two examples of this. (This type of repeating decimal can be obtained by long division if one uses a modified form of the usual division algorithm.) Any number that cannot be expressed as a ratio of two integers is said to be irrational. Their decimal representation neither terminates nor infinitely repeats but extends forever without regular repetition. Examples of such irrational numbers are √2 and π.

Conceptual map: Número decimal periódico

Exclusive content for members of

D/i/d/a/c/t/a/l/i/a
Sign in

Mira un ejemplo de lo que te pierdes

Categories:

Tags:

Fecha publicación: 30.8.2016

Comment

0

Do you want to comment? Sign up or Sign in

Join Didactalia

Browse among 226349 resources and 565039 people

Regístrate >

O conéctate a través de:

Si ya eres usuario, Inicia sesión

Do you want to access more educational content?

Sign in Join a class
x

Add to Didactalia Arrastra el botón a la barra de marcadores del navegador y comparte tus contenidos preferidos. Más info...

Game help
Juegos de anatomía
Selecciona nivel educativo