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IB Maths AI 1.6 Notes

This page contains our IB Maths AI notes for 1.6. By reading each one of these notes, you will fully cover the content for IB Maths AI 'Handling numbers'.

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Rounding

Handling numbers involves working accurately with rounded values, recognising the limits of measured data, and checking whether answers are sensible. This includes rounding, upper and lower bounds, percentage error and estimation.

Rounding makes a number simpler while keeping it close to the original value. You may round to the nearest whole number, a given number of decimal places, or a given number of significant figures.

  • To round to a given decimal place, look at the digit immediately after the place you want to keep. If it is 55 or more, round up. If it is less than 55, leave the digit unchanged.
  • To round to a given number of significant figures, start counting from the first non-zero digit. Keep the required number of digits, then use the next digit to decide whether to round up.

For example, 3456.783456.78 rounded to the nearest whole number is 34573457. Rounded to 22 decimal places, it stays as 3456.783456.78. Rounded to 11 significant figure, it becomes 30003000.

Round 5.67895.6789 to the nearest whole number, to 22 decimal places, and to 11 significant figure.

  • To the nearest whole number, 5.67895.6789 rounds to 66.
  • To 22 decimal places, look at the third decimal digit. Since it is 88, round up to get 5.685.68.
  • To 11 significant figure, keep the 55 and look at the next digit, which is 66, so round up to 66.

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