🧭 Overview
🧠 One-sentence thesis
The "Dots & Boxes" model extends naturally to represent fractional place values (radix points) in any number base, enabling division and decimal-like expansions through systematic unexplosion and grouping.
📌 Key points (3–5)
- Radix points generalize decimals: Just as base-10 uses a decimal point for tenths/hundredths, any base can use a radix point for fractional place values (e.g., "pentimal" for base-5).
- Division creates fractional representations: Performing division in Dots & Boxes by repeatedly unexploding dots and forming groups produces decimal-like expansions.
- Terminating vs repeating patterns: Fractions with denominators containing only factors of the base (2s and 5s in base-10) terminate; others repeat infinitely.
- Common confusion—period vs remainder: The period (length of repeating block) is determined by when remainders repeat during division, not by the denominator itself.
- Cross-base insight: The same fraction behaves differently in different bases—what terminates in one base may repeat in another.
🔢 Radix points in different bases
🔢 What a radix point represents
Radix point: The general term for the point separating whole-number places from fractional places in any base system.
- In base-10, we call it a "decimal point" (from Latin "decem" = ten).
- In base-5, it could be called a "pentimal point."
- Boxes to the left of the radix point represent positive powers of the base.
- Boxes to the right represent reciprocals (negative powers) of the base.
🧮 Place values in other bases
In a base-b system:
- The first box right of the radix point represents 1/b.
- The second box represents 1/b².
- The third box represents 1/b³, and so on.
Example: In base-5, the boxes right of the radix point represent 1/5, 1/25, 1/125, etc.
Don't confuse: The place values change with the base—1/5 in base-5 is not the same position as 1/10 in base-10.
🔄 Division and decimal expansions
🔄 Division as grouping in Dots & Boxes
The excerpt shows that division can be performed by:
- Starting with the dividend in Dots & Boxes form.
- Forming groups equal to the divisor.
- When no more groups fit, unexplode a dot into the next box to the right.
- Continue forming groups and unexploding until done (or a pattern emerges).
Example: To compute 1 ÷ 8 in base-10:
- Start with 1 dot in the ones box.
- Unexplode to get 10 dots in the 1/10 box → one group of 8, remainder 2.
- Unexplode the 2 dots to get 20 in the 1/100 box → two groups of 8, remainder 4.
- Unexplode the 4 dots to get 40 in the 1/1000 box → five groups of 8, remainder 0.
- Result: 1/8 = 0.125.
🔁 When division repeats forever
If during division the same remainder appears in the same position again, the process will repeat infinitely.
Example: Computing 1 ÷ 3:
- Unexplode 1 dot → 10 dots in 1/10 box → three groups of 3, remainder 1.
- Unexplode that 1 dot → 10 dots in 1/100 box → three groups of 3, remainder 1.
- The remainder of 1 keeps recurring, so the pattern repeats: 1/3 = 0.333...
Notation: A vinculum (horizontal bar) indicates repeating digits: 0.3̄ means 0.333...
🎯 Terminating vs repeating decimals
🎯 What makes a decimal terminate
A unit fraction 1/n has a terminating decimal expansion in base-10 if and only if the denominator n can be factored into only 2s and 5s.
Why: Because 2 × 5 = 10, any combination of 2s and 5s can be converted to a power of 10.
Example: 1/8 = 1/2³ can be rewritten as 125/1000 by multiplying numerator and denominator by 5³.
| Fraction | Denominator factors | Terminates? |
|---|
| 1/8 | 2³ | Yes |
| 1/25 | 5² | Yes |
| 1/6 | 2 × 3 | No (has factor 3) |
🔁 What makes a decimal repeat
If the denominator has prime factors besides 2 and 5, the decimal expansion will repeat infinitely.
Period definition:
Period: The smallest number of digits that repeat in a repeating decimal.
Example: 1/6 = 0.1̄6̄ has period 1 (just "6" repeats), while 6/7 = 0.857142̄ has period 6.
⏱️ Why repetition is guaranteed
When dividing 1 by n, the possible remainders are limited to 0, 1, 2, ..., n−1.
- If remainder becomes 0, the division terminates.
- If remainder never becomes 0, you must eventually see a repeated remainder (since there are only n−1 non-zero options).
- Once a remainder repeats, the entire division process repeats from that point.
Key insight: The period of 1/n must be less than n, because you'll see a repeated remainder within n steps.
🌐 Cross-base behavior
🌐 Same fraction, different bases
The excerpt demonstrates that the same fraction (expressed in base-10) behaves differently when converted to other bases.
Example from the excerpt: The fraction 1/2 (in base-10):
- In base-10: 1/2 = 0.5 (terminates).
- In base-5: The division 1 ÷ 2 in base-5 produces a different pattern.
- In base-3: Yet another pattern emerges.
🔍 General rule for termination
A fraction terminates in base-b if and only if the denominator (after simplification) contains only prime factors that are also factors of b.
Example: In base-6 (= 2 × 3), fractions with denominators containing only 2s and 3s will terminate.
Don't confuse: A fraction that repeats in base-10 might terminate in another base, and vice versa.
🧮 Operations on decimals
➕ Adding and subtracting with place value
The excerpt emphasizes lining up the decimal points when adding or subtracting.
Why this works: Each box in Dots & Boxes represents a specific place value—you can only combine dots in the same box (same place value).
Example: Adding 1.6 + 4.89 requires:
- Aligning the ones, tenths, hundredths places.
- Adding within each place.
- Performing explosions if needed.
✖️ Multiplying decimals
The standard algorithm:
- Multiply as if both numbers were whole numbers (ignore decimal points).
- Count total digits to the right of decimal points in both factors.
- Place the decimal point in the product so it has that many digits to the right.
Why this works: Writing decimals as fractions shows that multiplying a/(10^m) by b/(10^n) gives (a×b)/(10^(m+n)).
➗ Dividing decimals
The standard algorithm:
- Move the divisor's decimal point to the end (make it a whole number).
- Move the dividend's decimal point the same number of places.
- Divide the new dividend by the new whole-number divisor.
Why this works: Multiplying both dividend and divisor by the same power of 10 doesn't change the quotient's value.
📏 Orders of magnitude and Fermi problems
📏 Thinking multiplicatively about large numbers
The excerpt emphasizes that people often think additively about large numbers when they should think multiplicatively.
Example: One billion is not "a million plus a little more"—it's 1,000 times one million.
🧪 Fermi problem approach
Fermi problem: A problem requiring estimation and reasoning to find an approximate answer when exact data is unavailable.
Steps illustrated in the excerpt:
- Define terms clearly.
- Write down what you know (or can reasonably estimate).
- Make educated guesses with justification.
- Do simple calculations to reach an order-of-magnitude answer.
Example from excerpt: Estimating the number of elementary teachers in Hawaii by:
- Estimating population (~1,000,000).
- Estimating fraction who are K-5 students.
- Estimating average class size.
- Calculating number of classes ≈ number of teachers.
Key insight: The goal is not exact precision but getting the right order of magnitude (is it hundreds? thousands? millions?).