The 'decimal' ('base ten' or occasionally 'denary')
numeral system has
ten as its
base. It is the most widely used numeral system, perhaps because humans have four
fingers and a thumb on each hand, giving a total of ten digits over both hands.
Decimal notation
Decimal notation is the writing of
numbers in the base-ten
numeral system, which uses various symbols (called
digits) for no more than ten distinct values (0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 and 9) to represent any numbers, no matter how large. These digits are often used with a
decimal separator which indicates the start of a fractional part, and with one of the sign symbols + (positive) or − (negative) in front of the numerals to indicate sign.
There are only two truly positional decimal systems in ancient civilization, the
Chinese counting rods system and Hindu-Arabic numeric system, both required no more
than ten symbols. Other numeric systems require more symbols.
The
decimal system is a
positional numeral system; it has positions for units, tens, hundreds, ''etc.'' The position of each digit conveys the multiplier (a power of ten) to be used with that digit—each position has a value ten times that of the position to its right.
Ten is the number which is the count of fingers and thumbs on both hands (or toes on the feet). In many languages the word
digit or its translation is also the anatomical term referring to fingers and toes. In English, decimal (decimus <
Lat.) means ''tenth'', decimate means ''reduce by a tenth'', and denary (denarius < Lat.) means ''the
unit of ten''.
The symbols for the digits in common use around the
globe today are called
Arabic numerals by Europeans and
Indian numerals by Arabs, the two groups' terms both referring to the culture from which they learned the system. However, the symbols used in different areas are not identical; for instance, Western Arabic numerals (from which the European numerals are derived) differ from the forms used by other Arab cultures.
Alternative notations
Some cultures do, or used to, use other numeral systems, including
pre-Columbian Mesoamerican cultures such as the
Maya, who use a
vigesimal system (using all twenty fingers and
toes), some
Nigerians who use several
duodecimal (base 12) systems, the
Babylonians, who used
sexagesimal (base 60), and the
Yuki, who reportedly used
octal (base 8).
Computer hardware and software systems commonly use a
binary representation, internally. For external use by computer specialists, this binary representation is sometimes presented in the related
octal or
hexadecimal systems.
For most purposes, however, binary values are converted to the equivalent decimal values for presentation to and manipulation by humans.
Both computer hardware and software also use internal representations which are effectively decimal for storing decimal values and doing arithmetic. Often this arithmetic is done on data which are encoded using
binary-coded decimal, but there are other decimal representations in use (see
IEEE 754r), especially in database implementations. Decimal arithmetic is used in computers so that decimal fractional results can be computed exactly, which is not possible using a binary fractional representation.
This is often important for financial and other calculations
[1].
Decimal fractions
A 'decimal fraction' is a
fraction where the
denominator is a
power of ten.
Decimal fractions are commonly expressed without a denominator, the
decimal separator being inserted into the numerator (with
leading zeros added if needed), at the position from the right corresponding to the power of ten of the denominator. e.g., 8/10, 833/100, 83/1000, and 8/10000 are expressed as: 0'.'8, 8'.'33, 0'.'083, and 0'.'0008. In English-speaking countries, a dot ('·') or period ('.') is used as the decimal separator; in most other languages a comma is used.
The 'integer part' or 'integral part' of a decimal number is the part to the left of the decimal separator (see also
floor function). The part from the decimal separator to the right is the fractional part; if considered as a separate number, a zero is often written in front. Especially for negative numbers, we have to distinguish between the fractional part of the notation and the fractional part of the number itself, because the latter gets its own minus sign. It is usual for a decimal number which is less than one to have a leading zero.
Trailing zeros after the decimal point are not necessary, although in science, engineering and
statistics they can be retained to indicate a required precision or to show a level of confidence in the accuracy of the number: Whereas 0'.'080 and 0'.'08 are numerically equal, in engineering 0'.'080 suggests a measurement with an error of up to 1 part in two thousand (±0'.'0005), while 0'.'08 suggests a measurement with an error of up to 1 in two hundred (see ''
Significant figures'').
Other rational numbers
Any
rational number which cannot be expressed as a decimal fraction has a unique infinite decimal expansion ending with
recurring decimals.
Ten is the product of the first and third
prime numbers, is one greater than the square of the second prime number, and is one less than the fifth prime number. This leads to plenty of simple decimal fractions:
:1/2 = 0.5
:1/3 = 0.333333… (with 3 repeating)
:1/4 = 0.25
:1/5 = 0.2
:1/6 = 0.166666… (with 6 repeating)
:1/8 = 0.125
:1/9 = 0.111111… (with 1 repeating)
:1/10 = 0.1
:1/11 = 0.090909… (with 09 repeating)
:1/12 = 0.083333… (with 3 repeating)
:1/81 = 0.012345679012… (with 012345679 repeating)
Other prime factors in the denominator will give longer recurring
sequences, see for instance
7,
13.
That a rational must produce a
finite or recurring decimal expansion can be seen to be a consequence of the
long division algorithm, in that there are only (q-1) possible nonzero
remainders on division by q, so that the recurring pattern will have a period less than q-1. For instance to find 3/7 by long division:
.4 2 8 5 7 1 4 ...
7 ) 3.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
2 8 30/7 = 4 r 2
2 0
1 4 20/7 = 2 r 6
6 0
5 6 60/7 = 8 r 4
4 0
3 5 40/7 = 5 r 5
5 0
4 9 50/7 = 7 r 1
1 0
7 10/7 = 1 r 3
3 0
2 8 30/7 = 4 r 2 (again)
2 0
etc
The converse to this observation is that every
recurring decimal represents a rational number ''p''/''q''. This is a consequence of the fact the recurring part of a decimal representation is, in fact, an infinite
geometric series which will sum to a rational number. For instance,
:
Real numbers
Every
real number has a (possibly infinite) decimal representation, i.e., it can be written as
:
where
★ sign() is the
sign function,
★ ''a
i'' ∈ { 0,1,…,9 } for all ''i'' ∈ 'Z', are its 'decimal digits', equal to zero for all ''i'' greater than some number (that number being the
common logarithm of |x|).
Such a sum converges as ''i'' decreases, even if there are infinitely many nonzero ''a
i''.
Rational numbers (e.g. p/q) with
prime factors in the denominator other than 2 and 5 (when reduced to simplest terms) have a unique
recurring decimal representation.
Consider those rational numbers which have only the factors 2 and 5 in the denominator, i.e. which can be written as p/(2
a5
b). In this case there is a terminating decimal representation. For instance 1/1=1, 1/2=0.5, 3/5=0.6, 3/25=0.12 and 1306/1250=1.0448. Such numbers are the only real numbers which don't have a unique decimal representation, as they can also be written as a representation that has a recurring 9, for instance 1=0.99999…, 1/2=0.499999…, etc.
This leaves the
irrational numbers. They also have unique infinite decimal representation, and can be characterised as the numbers whose decimal representations neither terminate nor recur.
So in general the decimal representation is unique, if one excludes representations that end in a recurring 9.
Naturally, the same
trichotomy holds for other base-n
positional numeral systems:
★ Terminating representation: rational where the denominator divides some n
k
★ Recurring representation: other rational
★ Non-terminating, non-recurring representation: irrational
and a version of this even holds for irrational-base numeration systems, such as
golden mean base representation.
History
There follows a chronological list of recorded decimal writers.
Decimal writers
★ ''c.'' 3500 - 2500 BC
Elamites of
Iran possibly used early forms of decimal system.
[2] [3]
★ ''c.'' 2900 BC
Egyptian hieroglyphs show counting in powers of 10 (1 million + 400,000 goats, ''etc.'') – see Ifrah, below
★ ''c.'' 2600 BC
Indus Valley Civilization, earliest known physical use of decimal
fractions in ancient weight system: 1/20, 1/10, 1/5, 1/2. See
Ancient Indus Valley weights and measures
★ ''c.'' 1400 BC
Chinese writers show familiarity with the concept: for example, 547 is written 'Five hundred plus four decades plus seven of days' in some manuscripts
★ ''c.'' 1200 BC In
ancient India, the
Vedic text ''
Yajur-Veda'' states the
powers of 10, up to 10
55
★ ''c.'' 400 BC
Pingala – develops the binary number system for Sanskrit prosody, with a clear mapping to the base-10 decimal system
★ ''c.'' 250 BC
Archimedes writes the ''
Sand Reckoner'', which takes decimal calculation up to
★ ''c.'' 100–200 The ''
Satkhandagama'' written in
India – earliest use of decimal logarithms
★ ''c.'' 476–550
Aryabhata – uses an alphabetic cipher system for numbers that used zero
★ ''c.'' 598–670
Brahmagupta – explains the
Hindu-Arabic numerals (modern number system) which uses decimal
integers,
negative integers, and
zero
★ ''c.'' 780–850
Muḥammad ibn Mūsā al-Ḵwārizmī – first to expound on
algorism outside
India
★ ''c.'' 920–980
Abu'l Hasan Ahmad ibn Ibrahim Al-Uqlidisi – earliest known direct mathematical treatment of decimal fractions.
★ ''c.'' 1300–1500 The
Kerala School in
South India – decimal
floating point numbers
★ 1548/49–1620
Simon Stevin – author of ''De Thiende'' ('the tenth')
★ 1561–1613
Bartholemaeus Pitiscus – (possibly) decimal point notation.
★ 1550–1617
John Napier – use of decimal logarithms as a computational tool
★ 1925
Louis Charles Karpinski – classic book ''The History of Arithmetic'' (Rand McNally & Company)
★ 1959
Werner Buchholz ''Fingers or Fists? (The Choice of Decimal or Binary representation)'' (Communications of the ACM, Vol. 2 #12, pp3-11)
★ 1974
Hermann Schmid ''Decimal Computation'' (ISBN 047176180X)
★ 2000
Georges Ifrah ''The Universal History of Numbers: From Prehistory to the Invention of the Computer'' (ISBN 0-471-39340-1).
Natural languages
A straightforward decimal system, in which 11 is expressed as ''ten-one'' and 23 as ''two-ten-three'', is found in
Chinese languages except
Wu, and in
Vietnamese with a few irregularities.
Japanese,
Korean, and
Thai have imported the Chinese decimal system. Many other languages with a decimal system have special words for teens and decades.
Incan languages such as
Quechua and
Aymara have an almost straightforward decimal system, in which 11 is expressed as ''ten with one'' and 23 as ''two-ten with three''.
Some psychologists suggest irregularities of numerals in a language may hinder children's counting ability .
See also
★
Algorism
★
Binary-coded decimal
★
Decimal representation
★
Decimal separator
★
Dewey Decimal System
★
Hindu-Arabic numeral system
★
Numeral system
★
Scientific notation
★
SI prefix
★
10 (number)
References
★ .
External links
★
Decimal arithmetic FAQ
★ Tests:
Decimal Place Value Sums Fractions
★
Practice Decimal Arithmetic with Printable Worksheets
★
Converting Decimals to Fractions
★
Cultural Aspects of Young Children's Mathematics Knowledge
★
Decimal Bibliography