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Repeating Decimals and Fractions

Repeating Decimals and Fractions

Every rational number can be expressed as either a terminating decimal (like 0.50.5) or a repeating decimal (like 0.30.\overline{3}). A repeating decimal has a digit or a block of digits that repeats infinitely. Because repeating decimals are rational numbers, they can always be written as fractions.

The Algebraic Method

To convert a repeating decimal into a fraction, we use a clever algebraic trick to eliminate the infinite repeating part.

  1. Set the repeating decimal equal to a variable, like xx.
  2. Count how many digits make up the repeating block.
  3. Multiply both sides of the equation by 10n10^n, where nn is the number of repeating digits. (Multiply by 10 for 1 digit, 100 for 2 digits, etc.)
  4. Subtract the original equation from the new equation to cancel out the repeating decimal.
  5. Solve for xx and simplify the fraction.

Example 1: Single Repeating Digit

Convert 0.60.\overline{6} to a fraction.

Let xx equal the repeating decimal: x=0.6666...x = 0.6666...

Since only one digit (6) repeats, multiply both sides by 10: 10x=6.6666...10x = 6.6666...

Now, subtract the original equation (xx) from this new equation: 10xx=6.6666...0.6666...10x - x = 6.6666... - 0.6666... 9x=69x = 6

Divide by 9 to solve for xx: x=69x = \frac{6}{9}

Simplify the fraction by dividing the numerator and denominator by 3: x=23x = \frac{2}{3}

Example 2: Multiple Repeating Digits

Convert 0.270.\overline{27} to a fraction.

Let xx equal the decimal: x=0.272727...x = 0.272727...

Because two digits (27) repeat, multiply by 100: 100x=27.272727...100x = 27.272727...

Subtract the original equation: 100xx=27.272727...0.272727...100x - x = 27.272727... - 0.272727... 99x=2799x = 27

Solve for xx and simplify (divide by 9): x=2799=311x = \frac{27}{99} = \frac{3}{11}

Example 3: Fraction to Decimal

Is 711\frac{7}{11} a terminating or repeating decimal?

To find out, simply divide the numerator by the denominator: 7÷11=0.636363...7 \div 11 = 0.636363...

Because the digits "63" repeat infinitely, it is a repeating decimal, which we write as 0.630.\overline{63}.