Explain rational number.....
Answers
A rational number is a number that can be written in the form of a numerator upon a denominator. Here the denominator should not be equal to 0. The numerator and the denominator will be integers. A rational number is of the form
p/q
p = numerator, q= denominator, where p and q are integers and q ≠0
Examples:
3/5,−3/10,11/−15
. Here we can see that all the numerators and denominators are integers and even the denominators should be non-zero.
Explain rational number ?
rational numbers are represented in p/q form where q is not equal to zero.
Any fraction with non-zero denominators is a rational number.
we can say that ‘0’ is also a rational number, as we can represent it in many forms such as 0/1, 0/2, 0/3, etc. But, 1/0, 2/0, 3/0, etc. are not rational.
How to identify rational numbers?
It is represented in the form of p/q, where q≠0.
The ratio p/q can be further simplified and represented in decimal form.
Include positive, negative numbers, and zero.
Hope it will be helpful :)....✍️