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" 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 42
by Charles Gerard White, Pitt Payson Colgrove - 1916 - 281 pages
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Complete Arithmetic: Combining Oral and Written Exercises

Edward Sylvester Ellis - Arithmetic - 1889 - 370 pages
...may be shown thus : 64 - !§ = iS§ = 4.82. ART. 179. — Snle for Division of Decimals. — Divide as in whole numbers, and point off as many decimal places in the quotient as the number of decimal places in the dividend exceeds the number in the divisor. NOTE. —...
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An Arithmetic for Preparatory Schools, High Schools, and Academies

Charles Austin Hobbs - Arithmetic - 1889 - 370 pages
...the answer. 0.020104 From these two examples we see that we multiply as in whole numbers, pointing off as many decimal places in the product as there are in both multiplicand and multiplier. EXAMPLES. 1. Multiply 6.4 by 1.5. 2. Multiply 0.64 by 0.15. 3. Multiply...
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First Book of Arithmetic: Uniting Oral and Written Exercises

Emerson Elbridge White - Arithmetic - 1890 - 178 pages
...10000. To multiply one decimal by another: — RULE. — Multiply as in the multiplication of integers, and point off as many decimal places in the product as there are decimal places in both multiplicand and multiplier. NOTE. — If there be not enough decimal figures...
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Elementary Arithmetic

John Williston Cook, Nebraska C. Cropsey - Arithmetic - 1893 - 316 pages
...contains as many .2544 decimal places as there are in both factors. 18. Multiply .253 by .35. ,,-.-, Multiply as in whole numbers, and point off as many...decimal places in the product as there are in both multiplicand and mul1265 tiplier. If there are not enough figures in 759 the product to fill the decimal...
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The Normal Elementary Arithmetic: Embracing a Course of Easy and Progressive ...

Edward Brooks - Arithmetic - 1893 - 228 pages
...P = To-5 X 3 -*& — 3 - 45 - From cither of these solutions we derive the following RULK.—Divide as in whole numbers, and point off as many decimal places in the quotient as the number of decimal places in the dividend exceeds the number in the divisor. NOTE 1.—When...
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The Essentials of Arithmetic, Oral and Written, Book 1

Gordon Augustus Southworth - Arithmetic - 1893 - 200 pages
...0.12? Process. T*ff of T% = т*Д. = 0.24. Process. T6ff XЛ^ = Тй?^ = 0.072. Remark. There will be as many decimal places in the product as there are in both factors. 5. 0.5 of 40 8.0.3x0.09 11. 3% of 900 14.0.7x0.90 6. 5% of 300 9.0.7x0.8 12. 20% of 500 15.0.6x2.5...
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The Indiana School Journal, Volume 38

Education - 1893 - 1072 pages
...too apt to commit the words of a rule without comprehending their meaning. 2. There should always be as many decimal places in the product as there are in both multiplier and multiplicand, because the denominator of the product contains as many ciphers as both...
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New Practical Arithmetic: In which the Science and Its Applications are ...

Henry B. Maglathlin - 1894 - 370 pages
...decimal places in the product is equal to the number of decimal places in both of the factors. BULB. Multiply as in whole numbers, and point off as many decimal places in the product as there are decimal places in the multiplicand and multiplier, supplying the deficiency, if any, by prefixing ciphers....
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Graded Lessons in Number, Part 2

Wm. M. Peck - 1894 - 310 pages
...decimal places in the product equals the number of decimal places in the other factor, iv. There must be as many decimal places in the product, as there are in both factors, counting from the right of theproduct. 30. Division is the process of separating a number into equal...
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Elementary Arithmetic

John Williston Cook, Nebraska C. Cropsey - Arithmetic - 1895 - 330 pages
...product contains as many ."2544 decimal places as there are in both factors. 18. Multiply .253 by .35. Multiply as in whole numbers, and point off as many decimal places in the product .oi> as there are in both multiplicand and mul1265 tiplier. If there are not enough figures in 759...
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