- If you need clarification, ask it in the comment box above.
- Better answers use proper spelling and grammar.
- Provide details, support with references or personal experience.
Tell us some more! Your answer needs to include more details to help people.You can't post answers that contain an email address.Please enter a valid email address.The email address entered is already associated to an account.Login to postPlease use English characters only.
Tip: The max point reward for answering a question is 15.
If we are rounding to the nearest cent, we first locate that value. In this case, it is the second 8 to the right of the decimal. Next, we look at the number immediately to the right. In this case, it is the 4. Since this is 4 or less, we take this number and all numbers to the right to 0 and end up with 5.88.
If the 4 was a 5, the number is 5 or greater, so we have to round up by adding 1 to the cents column. In this case, it would be 5.89.
Greater than -5, means infinitely close to -5, but greater than it, so it is on the right hand side of it. On a number line, we indicate this with an open circle at -5.
Less than or equal to 5 means 5 and everything less than 5. On a number line, we indicate this by drawing a circle at 5 and filling it in.
O------------------------------------•
Sorry, I couldn't find a filled in circle to be the same size as the capital o;)
In mathematics, if there are 2 numbers being looked at as an inequality, the greater-than symbol usually goes in between the two and symbolizes that the first number is greater than the second number (For example: 4 > 2, or 102 > 100).
You should multiply the top line only of the fraction.
eg 2/3 x 5 = 10/3
This will often give an improper fraction, that is, one with the numerator (top line) greater than the bottom (denominator). Its value is then greater than one.
You can then reduce this by dividing the bottom into the top line, and writing the remainder as a fraction
I'm not going to do your homework for you, but here's a hint. You can use the Java modulus operator % to find if a number is divisible by 5. It provides the remainder after dividing, which will be zero if the number is divisible by 5. Here's a pseudocode example:
if ( (testNumber % 5) == 0)
{ numberIsDivisibleBy5 = true }
else
{ numberIsDivisibleBy5 = false }
You'll need to provide the rest of the work to put this test into a loop that goes from >40 to <250, checking each number and doing whatever you are supposed to (print a message, probably) when you find one divisible by 5.
Well it seems that you are graphing stat points and forgot to turn them off. This can be easily fixed by going to 2nd and Stat Plot then make sure all the stat plots are turned off. This should solve your issue.
×