Recurring Decimals - Secrets of the Mathematical Ninja
— Thanks to Rosalind for showing me this trick.
It’s one of the questions in the GCSE that looks like it ought to be easy: What is $0.1\dot{4}3\dot{6}$ as a fraction?
But it’s a lot less easy than it seems at first. I’ve taught the longwinded way for years. It turns out there’s a ninja shortcut you can do.
What you do is, starting from the right hand end, put a nine under each recurring digit (under or beneath the dots) and a 0 under anything else. In this case, you’d get 9990 — this will be the bottom of your fraction.
Now, temporarily ignore all of the dots and think about what number you have: 1436 here. If you have anything that’s not recurring — in this case, that’s the 1 at the start — away from it, to get 1435. That’s your top.
So, $0.1\dot{4}3\dot{6} = \frac{1435}{9990}$.
Being ninjas, we choose to cancel that down — there’s clearly a factor of 5, making it $\frac{287}{1998}$, which doesn’t cancel.
This is nastier than anything you’ll see in a GCSE (at worst, you’ll have two numbers under dots and possibly one in front).
You can also use this to show that $0.\dot{9} = 1$.
I haven’t figured out why this trick works – I’d love to hear your theories!