How do you show the group of digits that repeat in a repeating decimal?(1 point)

Responses

by printing them in italics

by putting a bar over them

by underlining them

by putting them in parentheses

by putting a bar over them

How many digits long could the repeating cycle of a repeating decimal be if the denominator of the rational number is 7?(1 point)

Responses

infinitely long

up to seven digits long

up to six digits long

any finite length

up to six digits long

Convert 0.27¯¯¯¯¯

to a rational number in simplest form.(1 point)
Responses

311
Start Fraction 3 over 11 end fraction

127
Start Fraction 1 over 27 end fraction

27100
Start Fraction 27 over 100 end fraction

2799
Start Fraction 27 over 99 end fraction

Start Fraction 3 over 11 end fraction

To convert 0.264¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯ to a rational number, you would set x equal to 0.264¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯ and then multiply both sides of the equation by what number?(1 point)

Responses

999
999

1,000
1,000

100
100

10

999

If a repeating decimal has a repeating cycle of three digits, it will convert to a rational number with what denominator? (1 point)

Responses

999
999

1,000
1,000

99
99

100

99

To show the group of digits that repeat in a repeating decimal, you can use a bar over the repeating digits. This is often called a "repeating bar" or a "repetition bar." By placing a bar over the digits that repeat, it visually represents that the group of digits repeats infinitely.

For example, if you have the decimal representation 0.333..., where the digit 3 repeats infinitely, you would write it as 0.3̅. The bar is placed over the digit or group of digits that repeat. The bar can be drawn either as a short horizontal line or as a curly line depending on personal preference or convention.

So, to explicitly represent the group of digits that repeat in a repeating decimal, you can use a bar over the repeating digits, rather than using italics, underlining, or parentheses.