Recurring decimals are like a never-ending game of claps, they keep repeating, and you can always tell what comes next.
Imagine you're sharing 1 pizza with 3 friends. You all get equal slices, but the division doesn’t come out perfectly at first. It looks like this: 1 ÷ 3 = 0.333333... forever! That’s a recurring decimal, it goes on and on, repeating the same digit or group of digits.
What Makes a Decimal Recurring?
A recurring decimal happens when you divide two whole numbers, but one doesn’t go into the other evenly. It keeps giving you more digits after the decimal point, like the sound of a drum that never stops beating!
For example:
- 1 ÷ 3 = 0.333...
- 2 ÷ 11 = 0.181818...
You can see the pattern repeating, just like how your favorite song repeats on loop when you're dancing.
How Do You Know When It’s Recurring?
When you do long division and start to notice the same remainders showing up again, that means a part of the decimal is going to repeat. It's like seeing the same number pop up in the same place, it tells you it's time for the pattern to begin again!
You can write recurring decimals with a little line or dot above the repeating part, like this: 0.\overline{3} or 0.\overline{18}. It’s like putting a sign that says, “This is where the fun begins, and it never ends!”Recurring decimals are like a never-ending game of claps, they keep repeating, and you can always tell what comes next.
Imagine you're sharing 1 pizza with 3 friends. You all get equal slices, but the division doesn’t come out perfectly at first. It looks like this: 1 ÷ 3 = 0.333333... forever! That’s a recurring decimal, it goes on and on, repeating the same digit or group of digits.
Examples
- Understanding that 0.333... is the same as 1/3
- Seeing how 0.666... repeats and relates to two-thirds
- Recognizing a pattern in 0.121212...
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See also
- What is 1/50th?
- What is 10 out of 13 seats?
- Why Some Decimals Repeat and Others Don't?
- What is percentage?
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