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Fractions v. Decimals
Though I have seen U.K. motorway signs that read 'Exit 15, 2 1/3 miles' (which must cause puzzlement to foreign visitors), overall and since decimalization of the pound, we seem to abandon more and more the use of fractions which are often an inefficient means of mathmatical notation and lead to mathmatical infinities, for example, if you divide 10 by three in base ten you get 3.3 recurring (infinitely). Equally you could say that the answer is 3 1/3 with no infinite recurrence, - end of story! Why are modern scientists, mathematicians and everyone else so ready to abandon fractions ?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Complete bowlocks from chuck as usual. Computers work just as well with fractions which are only a sum in themselves, what we choose to call a third, 1/3 is simply a division sum, equally solluble to computers. On road signs 1/2, 1/4, 1/3 etc are clearer to all, even foriegners use maths notation in fact it is Maths that is the true universal language.
Actually computers don't handle decimals very well.
Unless special precautions are taken, trivial devisions that seem like they should give a whole number result will include a rounding error. This is because the computer works in binary.
To produce accuarate results numbers with decimal components have to be represented with integers and a scaling factor.
Unless special precautions are taken, trivial devisions that seem like they should give a whole number result will include a rounding error. This is because the computer works in binary.
To produce accuarate results numbers with decimal components have to be represented with integers and a scaling factor.