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https://math.answers.com/math-and-arithmetic/How_do_you_write_in_a_suitable_degree_of_accuracy_1.079871565

How do you write in a suitable degree of accuracy 1.079871565? - Answers

First you must decide what is a "suitable degree of accuracy" for a particular problem. In many cases, 4 or 5 significant digits are appropriate, or even 3. But it depends a lot on the original data (the final result is not supposed to look more accurate than the accuracy you can justify from the original data), and the purpose of the data (in some cases you need a higher accuracy than in others).



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How do you write in a suitable degree of accuracy 1.079871565? - Answers

https://math.answers.com/math-and-arithmetic/How_do_you_write_in_a_suitable_degree_of_accuracy_1.079871565

First you must decide what is a "suitable degree of accuracy" for a particular problem. In many cases, 4 or 5 significant digits are appropriate, or even 3. But it depends a lot on the original data (the final result is not supposed to look more accurate than the accuracy you can justify from the original data), and the purpose of the data (in some cases you need a higher accuracy than in others).



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https://math.answers.com/math-and-arithmetic/How_do_you_write_in_a_suitable_degree_of_accuracy_1.079871565

How do you write in a suitable degree of accuracy 1.079871565? - Answers

First you must decide what is a "suitable degree of accuracy" for a particular problem. In many cases, 4 or 5 significant digits are appropriate, or even 3. But it depends a lot on the original data (the final result is not supposed to look more accurate than the accuracy you can justify from the original data), and the purpose of the data (in some cases you need a higher accuracy than in others).

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      First you must decide what is a "suitable degree of accuracy" for a particular problem. In many cases, 4 or 5 significant digits are appropriate, or even 3. But it depends a lot on the original data (the final result is not supposed to look more accurate than the accuracy you can justify from the original data), and the purpose of the data (in some cases you need a higher accuracy than in others).
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