Rational vs Irrational Numbers: Key Differences Explained
Rational numbers can be expressed as a simple fraction a/b where a and b are integers and b ≠ 0; irrational numbers cannot be written this way and have endless, non-repeating decimals.
People confuse them because both look like “just decimals.” A calculator spits out 3.141592… and 22/7, so which is which? We rarely notice when a decimal quietly repeats or marches on forever, making the line feel blurry.
Key Differences
Rational numbers stop or cycle (e.g., 0.75, 1.333…). Irrationals never settle into a loop (π, √2). The decimal pattern is the tell: repeating block versus endless randomness.
Examples and Daily Life
Splitting a $15 pizza three ways gives $5.00—rational. Measuring a square room’s diagonal with a tape yields √2 meters—irrational. Builders round π to 3.14, but engineers keep more digits to avoid wobbly bridges.
Is 0.999… equal to 1?
Yes. The infinite 9s represent the rational number 1, proven by algebra or limits.
Can a calculator display an irrational exactly?
No. It rounds after a dozen digits, hiding the endless trail.
Are square roots always irrational?
Only if the radicand isn’t a perfect square; √4 = 2 is rational.