decimalis
Decimalis is a term encountered in some educational texts and speculative mathematics to encapsulate the study of decimal representations of real numbers. In this sense, decimalis provides a framework for discussing how numbers are written in base-10, how those representations behave, and what information the digits convey about the number.
Definition and core ideas: A real number x is expressed as its decimal expansion x = d0.d1d2d3...,
Examples: Terminating decimals include 0.5 and 0.125. Non-terminating repeating decimals include 0.333... and 0.142857142857.... Non-terminating non-repeating
History and usage: The name derives from Latin decimalis, related to ten or decimal. In formal mathematics,
See also: Decimal expansion; Repeating decimal; Rational number; Irrational number.