No, \(\frac{1}{10}\) < \(\frac{7}{12}\)
To compare these fractions, we need a common denominator. The denominators are 10 and 12, and the least common denominator (LCD) is 60.
A quicker way to compare fractions is to cross-multiply. Multiply each numerator by the other fraction's denominator:
Convert each fraction to a decimal by dividing the numerator by the denominator:
Since 0.1 is less than 0.583333, we confirm that \(\frac{1}{10} < \frac{7}{12}\). In percentage terms, \(\frac{1}{10}\) is 10% and \(\frac{7}{12}\) is 58.3333%, a difference of 48.3333 percentage points.
These fractions have different numerators and different denominators, so we can't compare them directly. By converting to a common denominator of 60, we're cutting both quantities into equal-sized pieces. Then 6 pieces vs 35 pieces is a straightforward comparison.
\(\frac{7}{12}\) is bigger. As a decimal, \(\frac{7}{12}\) = 0.583333 while \(\frac{1}{10}\) = 0.1.
The difference is \(\frac{29}{60}\), which equals 0.483333 in decimal form (48.3333 percentage points).
You can use three methods: find a common denominator and compare numerators, cross-multiply and compare the products, or convert both fractions to decimals. All three methods confirm that \(\frac{7}{12}\) \(>\) \(\frac{1}{10}\).