krit.club logo

Decimals - Introduction to Decimals

Grade 5ICSE

Review the key concepts, formulae, and examples before starting your quiz.

🔑Concepts

A decimal number consists of two parts: the whole number part and the fractional part, separated by a dot called the decimal point. Imagine a number line where the space between 0 and 1 is divided into 10 equal segments; each segment represents a tenth or 0.10.1.

In the Decimal Place Value system, digits to the left of the decimal point represent whole numbers (Ones, Tens, Hundreds), while digits to the right represent parts of a whole (Tenths, Hundredths, Thousandths). Visually, a grid of 100 small squares can represent one whole, where a single column of 10 squares represents one tenth (0.10.1) and a single small square represents one hundredth (0.010.01).

Reading and Writing Decimals: We read the whole number part as usual, the decimal point as 'point', and the decimal part by naming each digit individually. For example, 23.4523.45 is read as 'twenty-three point four five'.

Equivalent Decimals are decimals that have the same value. Adding any number of zeros to the right end of a decimal does not change its value. For instance, 0.50.5, 0.500.50, and 0.5000.500 are all equal, much like how 510\frac{5}{10} is equal to 50100\frac{50}{100}.

Like and Unlike Decimals: Like decimals have the same number of decimal places (e.g., 1.251.25 and 3.783.78 both have two decimal places). Unlike decimals have a different number of decimal places (e.g., 4.54.5 and 4.524.52). Unlike decimals can be converted into like decimals by adding zeros at the end.

Conversion of Fractions to Decimals: A fraction with a denominator of 10, 100, or 1000 can be easily written as a decimal. The number of zeros in the denominator tells us how many digits should be to the right of the decimal point. For example, 710=0.7\frac{7}{10} = 0.7 and 9100=0.09\frac{9}{100} = 0.09.

Expanded Form of Decimals: Decimals can be written as the sum of the place values of each digit. For example, 5.675.67 can be written as 5+610+71005 + \frac{6}{10} + \frac{7}{100} or 5+0.6+0.075 + 0.6 + 0.07.

📐Formulae

Decimal Number=Whole Number Part+Decimal Part\text{Decimal Number} = \text{Whole Number Part} + \text{Decimal Part}

Tenths Place=110=0.1\text{Tenths Place} = \frac{1}{10} = 0.1

Hundredths Place=1100=0.01\text{Hundredths Place} = \frac{1}{100} = 0.01

Thousandths Place=11000=0.001\text{Thousandths Place} = \frac{1}{1000} = 0.001

Expanded Form of a.bc=a+b10+c100\text{Expanded Form of } a.bc = a + \frac{b}{10} + \frac{c}{100}

💡Examples

Problem 1:

Convert the mixed fraction 15310015 \frac{3}{100} into a decimal number.

Solution:

Step 1: Identify the whole number part, which is 1515. \ Step 2: Convert the fractional part 3100\frac{3}{100} into a decimal. Since there are two zeros in 100, there must be two decimal places. Thus, 3100=0.03\frac{3}{100} = 0.03. \ Step 3: Combine the parts: 15+0.03=15.0315 + 0.03 = 15.03.

Explanation:

The whole number remains to the left of the decimal point, and the fraction 3100\frac{3}{100} indicates that the digit 3 must be in the hundredths place.

Problem 2:

Write the decimal 4.524.52 in its expanded form using both fractions and decimals.

Solution:

Step 1: Identify the place value of each digit. 4 is in the Ones place, 5 is in the Tenths place, and 2 is in the Hundredths place. \ Step 2: Write as a sum of fractions: 4+510+21004 + \frac{5}{10} + \frac{2}{100}. \ Step 3: Write as a sum of decimals: 4+0.5+0.024 + 0.5 + 0.02.

Explanation:

Expanding a decimal helps in understanding the value of each digit based on its position relative to the decimal point.