Multiply as in whole numbers, and point off as many decimal places in the product as there are in both multiplicand and multiplier. DIVISION. Divide as in whole numbers, and point off... Industrial Arithmetic - Page 42by Charles Gerard White, Pitt Payson Colgrove - 1916 - 281 pagesFull view - About this book
| Thomas Clarke (accountant.) - Arithmetic - 1742 - 152 pages
...Multiplication of Decimal Fractions IS the fame Way performed as Multiplication of Whole Numbers, only point off as many Decimal Places in the Product as there are Decimal Places in both the Multiplicand and Multiplier : As .31875 .002400 .015625 The Operation is... | |
| Wardhaugh Thompson - 1771 - 324 pages
...from Multiplication of Vulgar 1 ractions, the reafon why (in Multiplication of Decimals) we muft have as many Decimal places in the product as there are in both the Multiplicand and Multiplier. FIRST then according to Multiplication of Vulgar Fractions, let us... | |
| Colin Macfarquhar, George Gleig - Encyclopedias and dictionaries - 1797 - 474 pages
...£x. Required the reciprocal of 625. 625)i.ooo(.oob6 625 32I-4°35 In mttitiplicativn, " Allow аз many decimal places " in the product as there are in both factors. If the " produit has not fo many places, fupply them by '* prefixing cyphers on the left hand." £x.... | |
| Charles Davies - Arithmetic - 1838 - 292 pages
...answer. To express the 6 thousandths decimally we have to prefix two ciphers to the 6, and this makes as many decimal places in the product as there are in both multi plicand and multiplier. Therefore, to multiply one decimal by another, we have the following... | |
| Henry Raper - Nautical astronomy - 1840 - 700 pages
...From 423-5 sub. 97'9 rem. 325-6 2. Multiplication of Decimals. 7. Multiply the numbers together as whole numbers, and point off as many decimal places in the product (beginning at the right) as there are decimal places in the multiplier and multiplicand together. When... | |
| George Roberts Perkins - Arithmetic - 1841 - 274 pages
...91.6264232009 by 0.0172021234. DIVISION OF DECIMALS. -10. In multiplication we have seen that there are as many decimal places in the product as there are in both the factors; and since division is the reverse of multiplication, it follows that the number of decimal... | |
| Wales Christopher Hotson - 1842 - 306 pages
...To find the product of two decimals, orvmixed numbers containing decimals, multiply as in integers, and point off as many decimal places in the product as there arc in both factors. Ex. 1. Find the product of 31.43 and .3, 31.43 x -3 = 9.429. The corresponding... | |
| Charles DAVIES (LL.D.) - Arithmetic - 1843 - 348 pages
...answer. To express the 6 thousandths decimally we have to prefix two ciphers to the 6, and this makes as many decimal places in the product as there are in both multiplicand and multiplier. Therefore, to multiply one decimal by another, we have the following RULE.... | |
| Charles Davies - Arithmetic - 1844 - 356 pages
...answer. To express the 6 thousandths decimally we have to prefix two ciphers to the 6, and this makes as many decimal places in the product as there are in both multiplicand and multiplier. Therefore, to multiply one decimal by another, we have the following RU1E.... | |
| James Wood - Algebra - 1845 - 442 pages
...thus, 61-3 42-012 19-288 MULTIPLICATION. 46- To multiply one decimal by another multiply the figures an in whole numbers, and point off as many decimal places in the product as there are in the multiplier and multiplicand together. Ex. 51-3x4-6 = 235-98. 513 46 23598 , ,. , , . , For x —... | |
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