Math, asked by 6759njib, 8 months ago

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Answered by Harpreet0059
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Answer:

Non-Terminating, Non-Repeating Decimal. A non-terminating, non-repeating decimal is a decimal number that continues endlessly, with no group of digits repeating endlessly. Decimals of this type cannot be represented as fractions, and as a result are irrational numbers.

Non-terminating and non-recurring decimals are irrational numbers. .

Examples 2–√ , e , π , φ and so on (decimal representation are barely used and if rounded off to get an approximated numeric value).

Which are the examples of non-terminating, non-recurring decimal expansions?

What are examples of non-terminating repeating decimals?

What are some of the examples of non-terminating?

What are non-terminating and non-repeating?

What is a non-terminating repeating decimal?

Here are a couple of recurring decimals.

1/3=0.33333..... and 1/7=0.142857....

Both of these are non-terminating decimal representations of rational numbers.

Examples of non-repeating decimals include 2–√ which is irrational, and arguably the most famous transcendental numbers, π and e .

Terminating decimals, indicate that a zero repeats forever. For example {1/5,2/5,3/5,4/5}; non-terminating are like {1/3,2/3,1/6,1/7, Pi, e}, i.e. any number which does not end in repeating zeroes. Irrational numbers never repeat if their direction is zero or half a circle from zero.

We should be restricting discussion of terminating or non-terminating to just the magnitude (size) of numbers.

Answered by satishsoni1009
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Answer:

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