If x is the decimal 8.1d5, with d as an unknown digit, and x rounded to the nearest tenth is equal to 8.1, which digits could not be the value of d?
[note: no multiple choice options; it's a general question for practicing rounding to the nearest place value]
The book states that d cannot be 5, 6, 7, 8, or 9 -- but that d can be all lesser numbers including 4.
I would think that d cannot be 4 either, and am struggling with this answer because...
My thinking is that rounding begins from the far most right digit - in this case, the "5" in the thousandths place.
Given that x = 8.1d5 —> if d=4 and the resulting number were 8.145, then wouldn’t that number rounded become 8.2?
Since the 5 in the thousandths place would round the hundredths digit from 4 to 5, and then that 5 in the hundredths place would round up the tenths place digit to “2”, resulting in a final number of x=8.2