Math, asked by hudhashirin0, 19 days ago

What would be the quotient in a division where the dividend and the divisor are the same?

Answers

Answered by woodpecker22
1

Answer:

1

Step-by-step explanation:

example:

32÷32=1

Whenever the dividend and the divisor are same the answer will always be 1

Answered by enbyfeofyo
0

Answer:

2 situation may happen

1. If the division and dividend are 0, the result will be empty set ∅.

2. Any other number than 0, the result will be 1.

My teacher only taught me that division can't be 0. They didn't explant why. So I thought it would be easier to understand this way?

If we have 1 pizza, we cut our pizza into 6 equal pieces, we will have 6 pieces, and the weight of 1 pieces is 1/6.

1 is dividend, 6 is division, 1/6 is quotient. When we have 6 pieces, that means the pieces does exist, the quotient is exist.

If we cut 1 pizza into 0 pieces, we will have 0 pieces. When we have 0 pieces, we have nothing to weigh. The pizza pieces doesn't exist, the quotient doesn't exist.

Similar to the other situation. 1 pizza cut into 1 pieces, we get our 1 whole pizza.

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