A repeating decimal is a number that has digits that keep going on and on, following a pattern you can recognize.
Imagine you're sharing 1 candy bar equally among 3 friends. Each friend gets a piece that looks like this: 0.333333..., the 3 keeps showing up again and again! That's a repeating decimal, where one or more digits repeat endlessly.
How Repeating Decimals Work
When you divide numbers, sometimes the result doesn’t end, it just keeps going with a pattern. For example:
1 ÷ 3 = 0.333...2 ÷ 3 = 0.666...
These are called repeating decimals because a group of digits repeats forever.
A Real-Life Example
Think about a clock. Every time the minute hand goes around, it shows the same numbers again, like how repeating decimals show the same digits over and over. Just as the clock is predictable, so are these kinds of numbers!
Examples
- 0.142857142857... shows how
(1)/(7)cycles through six different digits.
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See also
- How to Convert Recurring Decimals to Fractions (Proportions Part 6/6) (2026/27 exams)?
- How Does Repeating and Terminating Decimals | Math with Mr. J Work?
- What are accumulated fractions of days?
- What Are Fractions? - Math Antics?
- What are fractions?