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Rounding & Estimation โ
Spec reference: Number - Rounding and approximation
Key idea: Round numbers to decimal places and significant figures; estimate answers to calculations.
Rounding to decimal places (d.p.) โ
- Identify the digit in the position you are rounding to
- Look at the next digit (the one to the right)
- If it is 5 or more, round up. If it is 4 or less, round down (keep the digit the same)
Example
Round 3.7461 to 2 decimal places.
The digit in the 2nd d.p. position is 4.
The next digit is 6 (>= 5), so round up.
Example
Round 0.08349 to 3 decimal places.
The digit in the 3rd d.p. position is 3.
The next digit is 4 (< 5), so round down.
Rounding to significant figures (s.f.) โ
The first significant figure is the first non-zero digit.
- Count to the required significant figure
- Apply the same rounding rule as above
- Replace digits after the rounded position with zeros if they are before the decimal point
Example
Round 47,382 to 2 significant figures.
The 2nd significant figure is 7.
The next digit is 3 (< 5), so round down.
Example
Round 0.006842 to 2 significant figures.
The 1st significant figure is 6 (first non-zero).
The 2nd is 8.
The next digit is 4 (< 5), so round down.
Estimation โ
To estimate, round each number to 1 significant figure, then calculate.
Example
Estimate
Round each value:
TIP
Estimation is useful to check whether a calculator answer is sensible.
Truncation โ
Truncation means cutting off digits after a certain point, without rounding up.
Example
Truncate 4.897 to 2 decimal places.
Simply remove digits after the 2nd d.p.:
Note: rounding gives 4.90, but truncation gives 4.89.
Exam tips โ
Watch out for
- Trailing zeros matter: 3.50 to 2 d.p. must be written as 3.50, not 3.5
- For significant figures, zeros between non-zero digits are significant: 3,007 has 4 s.f.
- Leading zeros are not significant: 0.0045 has 2 s.f.
Test Yourself โ
Question 1 of 5
Round 4.7836 to 2 decimal places