Math, asked by rajibsarma1967, 1 month ago

explain rational numbers​

Answers

Answered by rrmohan74
2

Answer:

Rational number, in arithmetic, a number that can be represented as the quotient p/q of two integers such that q ≠ 0. In addition to all the fractions, the set of rational numbers includes all the integers, each of which can be written as a quotient with the integer as the numerator and 1 as the denominator.

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Answered by AmAnushka
1

Answer:

Rational number, in arithmetic, a number that can be represented as the quotient p/q of two integers such that q ≠ 0. In addition to all the fractions, the set of rational numbers includes all the integers, each of which can be written as a quotient with the integer as the numerator and 1 as the denominator.

Symbol -

The symbol representing the rational numbers is Q.

Operations -

There are four basic arithmetic operations with rational numbers: addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division

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