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fractions

Fractions are a way to represent parts of a whole. A fraction is written as a/b, where the numerator a indicates how many parts are taken, and the denominator b indicates into how many equal parts the whole is divided, with b not equal to zero. Fractions express rational numbers and can be proper (a < b), improper (a ≥ b), or mixed numbers (an integer plus a proper fraction).

Equivalent fractions name the same value. They are obtained by multiplying numerator and denominator by the

Operations with fractions follow specific rules. Addition and subtraction require a common denominator; for a/b and

Fractions can be converted to decimals. Finite decimals occur when the denominator factors into powers of 2

Special notes: the numerator zero yields zero, provided the denominator is nonzero. A fraction with a zero

same
nonzero
integer.
Fractions
can
be
reduced
to
simplest
form
by
dividing
both
parts
by
their
greatest
common
divisor.
c/d,
the
result
is
(ad
±
bc)
/
bd
after
converting
to
a
common
denominator.
Multiplication
is
straightforward:
(a/b)
×
(c/d)
=
(ac)/(bd).
Division
is
handled
by
multiplying
by
the
reciprocal:
(a/b)
÷
(c/d)
=
(a/b)
×
(d/c),
provided
c
≠
0.
and/or
5
only;
other
denominators
yield
repeating
decimals.
Fractions
also
correspond
to
points
on
the
number
line
and
are
used
to
express
ratios,
probabilities,
measurements,
and
portions
in
daily
life.
denominator
is
undefined.
Understanding
fractions
involves
recognizing
equivalence,
simplifying,
and
applying
the
rules
for
arithmetic
operations.