Whole numbers and decimals
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Speaker: Not all numbers are whole numbers.
Decimals are numbers that are between two whole numbers.
So 1.4 is between 1 and 2.
A decimal that starts with a 0 before the decimal point is less than 1.
And you can add decimals together in lots of ways to get a whole one.
Reading decimals correctly
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Measuring effectively
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Speaker: When you're sewing, measuring correctly is very important and the decimals come into play.
Even if I've got the same digits in a number, if one has a decimal point in it and the other doesn't they will have different values because of that crucial decimal point.
For example, on the duvet cover I'm making, the gap between the buttons is 15 cm…
…and these buttons are 1.5 cm wide.
And if the digits moved again, then you're talking about something even smaller.
This elastic cord is just 1.5mm wide, which is the same as 0.15cm.
So, as the digits move in relation to the decimal point, the whole number gets 10 times smaller, or the whole number can become 10 times bigger and 10 times bigger again.
Putting decimals in order
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Breaking decimals down
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Speaker: I've got some fabric that's 1.5 metres wide and 9.5 metres long.
And I want to make three big floor cushions, each 1.5 metres square.
I hope I've got enough material.
That's six 1.5 metre square pieces to make three cushions.
So, to work out how much I need, I'm going to have to multiply 1.5 by 6.
It's sometimes easier when working with decimals to break the number down.
If I multiply the .5 by 6 first I get 3.
Then the 1 by 6, which is 6.
I add them together: the total is 9.
So if I take away 9 from the length of 9.5 fabric, I'll have 0.5 or half a metre left over, which is 50cm.
How much fabric is left over?
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