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How do you write a decimal going on for ever? - Answers

well, first of all you should have at least a decimal such as .33 or a fraction such as 1/3. if it is a fraction you should divide it by "cowboy and horse" (cowboy on top, horse is below the dash). the cowboy goes into the "house" and the horse goes outside. then you divide... then you get .3333. in this case you need to put a little dash above the last # that you decided to stop. that is called an infinite #. an example of a infinite # is PI. was you get the hang of it, it is really easy. just remember the little acronym and it will be a ton easier.



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How do you write a decimal going on for ever? - Answers

https://math.answers.com/math-and-arithmetic/How_do_you_write_a_decimal_going_on_for_ever

well, first of all you should have at least a decimal such as .33 or a fraction such as 1/3. if it is a fraction you should divide it by "cowboy and horse" (cowboy on top, horse is below the dash). the cowboy goes into the "house" and the horse goes outside. then you divide... then you get .3333. in this case you need to put a little dash above the last # that you decided to stop. that is called an infinite #. an example of a infinite # is PI. was you get the hang of it, it is really easy. just remember the little acronym and it will be a ton easier.



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https://math.answers.com/math-and-arithmetic/How_do_you_write_a_decimal_going_on_for_ever

How do you write a decimal going on for ever? - Answers

well, first of all you should have at least a decimal such as .33 or a fraction such as 1/3. if it is a fraction you should divide it by "cowboy and horse" (cowboy on top, horse is below the dash). the cowboy goes into the "house" and the horse goes outside. then you divide... then you get .3333. in this case you need to put a little dash above the last # that you decided to stop. that is called an infinite #. an example of a infinite # is PI. was you get the hang of it, it is really easy. just remember the little acronym and it will be a ton easier.

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      well, first of all you should have at least a decimal such as .33 or a fraction such as 1/3. if it is a fraction you should divide it by "cowboy and horse" (cowboy on top, horse is below the dash). the cowboy goes into the "house" and the horse goes outside. then you divide... then you get .3333. in this case you need to put a little dash above the last # that you decided to stop. that is called an infinite #. an example of a infinite # is PI. was you get the hang of it, it is really easy. just remember the little acronym and it will be a ton easier.
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