Remembering how to compare whole numbers is going to help us compare decimals in this lesson. Let's try this practice problem to review.
Which number is the smallest?
$69596$69596
$69796$69796
We can use place value columns to help us compare numbers with decimals.
If we have $0.342$0.342, and we are comparing it to $0.45$0.45, we can write them both in a place value table and compare which number is larger, moving across the columns from left to right. We can fill the empty columns with $0$0s.
Ones | $.$. | Tenths | Hundredths | Thousandths |
---|---|---|---|---|
$0$0 | $.$. | $3$3 | $4$4 | $2$2 |
$0$0 | $.$. | $4$4 | $5$5 | $0$0 |
In this video we looks at some examples, and see how we can compare decimals.
Enter the greater than ($>$>) or less than ($<$<) symbol in the box to make this number sentence true.
$0.022\editable{}0.023$0.0220.023
Enter the greater than ($>$>), less than ($<$<), or equals ($=$=) symbol in the box to make this number sentence true.
$0.882\editable{}0.88$0.8820.88
$>$> means 'greater than' and $<$< means 'less than'.