Rational number

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In mathematics, a rational number is any number that can be expressed as the quotient or fraction p/q of two integers, a numerator p and a non-zero denominator q.

Description

Since q may be equal to 1, every integer is a rational number.

The set of all rational numbers is usually denoted by a boldface Q (or blackboard bold \mathbb{Q}, Unicode ℚ); it was thus denoted in 1895 by Peano after quoziente, Italian for "quotient".

The decimal representation of a rational number always either terminates after a finite number of digits, or begins to repeat the same finite sequence of digits over and over.

Conversely, any repeating or terminating decimal represents a rational number.

These statements hold true not just for base 10, but also for any other integer base (e.g. binary, hexadecimal).

Irrational numbers

A real number that is not rational is called an irrational number, or simply irrational.

The decimal expansion of an irrational number continues without repeating.

Irrational numbers include √2, π, e, and φ.

See also

External links