Convert a Fraction
Enter any integer numerator and any nonzero integer denominator. Negative denominators are normalized automatically.
Example Conversions
| Fraction | Division result | Mixed number | Decimal |
|---|---|---|---|
| 7/3 | 7 ÷ 3 = 2 remainder 1 | 2 1/3 | 2.3333333333 |
| 11/4 | 11 ÷ 4 = 2 remainder 3 | 2 3/4 | 2.75 |
| -17/5 | 17 ÷ 5 = 3 remainder 2 | -3 2/5 | -3.4 |
| 24/6 | 24 ÷ 6 = 4 remainder 0 | 4 | 4 |
| 2/3 | 2 ÷ 3 = 0 remainder 2 | 2/3 | 0.6666666667 |
Formula Used
Divide the absolute numerator by the positive denominator. The quotient becomes the whole number. The remainder becomes the new numerator. Keep the denominator unchanged. Then reduce the remaining fraction with its greatest common divisor. Apply a negative sign to the complete result when the original fraction is negative.
How to Use This Calculator
- Type the fraction's top number in the numerator field.
- Type the bottom number in the denominator field.
- Select whether to reduce the remaining fraction.
- Choose decimal and calculation-step display options.
- Select Convert Fraction to view the result above the form.
- Use Download CSV or Save or Print PDF when needed.
Mixed Number Conversion Guide
What a Mixed Number Shows
A mixed number combines a whole number and a proper fraction. It gives a compact view of values larger than one. For example, 11/4 becomes 2 3/4. The whole part tells you how many complete groups fit. The fraction part shows what remains after those groups are removed. This format appears in recipes, measurements, classroom work, and construction notes.
Start With Division
Conversion begins with division. Divide the numerator by the denominator. The quotient is the whole number. The remainder is the numerator of the leftover fraction. Keep the original denominator for that leftover. For 19/6, divide nineteen by six. The quotient is three. The remainder is one. The answer is 3 1/6. This direct method works for every improper fraction.
Reduce the Remaining Fraction
Always check whether the remainder fraction can be simplified. A reduced result is easier to read and compare. Consider 14/4. Division gives 3 remainder 2. The first mixed form is 3 2/4. Both two and four share a factor of two. Divide them by two. The final result is 3 1/2. Simplification does not change the value. It only presents the fraction in lowest terms.
Handle Whole and Proper Fractions
Some fractions produce no leftover. For 18/3, the remainder is zero. The answer is simply 6. Do not write 6 0/3. Other entries are already proper fractions. With 3/8, the quotient is zero. The useful result remains 3/8, not 0 3/8. This calculator identifies both cases and formats them clearly.
Work With Negative Values
Negative fractions need careful sign handling. Convert the positive magnitude first. Then apply one negative sign to the complete mixed number. For -13/5, divide thirteen by five. You get 2 remainder 3. The result is -2 3/5. This means negative two and three fifths. A negative denominator is normalized before calculation, so 13/-5 produces the same value.
Check Your Answer
Use multiplication to verify a mixed number. Multiply the whole number by the denominator. Add the remainder numerator. Put that total over the denominator. For 4 2/7, multiply four by seven to get twenty-eight. Add two to get thirty. The original improper fraction is 30/7. This check catches misplaced remainders and incorrect simplification.
Use Results in Everyday Tasks
Mixed numbers make fractions easier to communicate. A recipe may call for 2 1/2 cups. A board may measure 7 3/8 inches. A student may need a clean answer for a worksheet. Use the decimal value when a decimal is more practical. Use the CSV file for records or lessons. Use the PDF option when you need a printable calculation summary. Review the units before copying a result. A mixed number does not replace the original measurement unit. Keep cups, inches, miles, or other labels beside the value. When sharing a result, state whether the fraction was simplified. Clear notation prevents confusion, especially when several measurements appear in one list or a classroom problem for accurate future reference.
Frequently Asked Questions
1. What is a mixed number?
A mixed number combines a whole number with a proper fraction. For example, 3 1/4 means three complete units plus one quarter of another unit.
2. Which fractions can become mixed numbers?
Improper fractions can become mixed numbers because their numerator is at least as large as their denominator. Proper fractions usually remain fractions because their value is less than one.
3. What happens when the remainder is zero?
The result is a whole number. For example, 20/5 equals 4. There is no fractional part because the division has no remainder.
4. Why should I simplify the leftover fraction?
Simplification gives the standard lowest-terms form. It improves readability and makes comparison easier. For example, 2 4/8 becomes 2 1/2 without changing the value.
5. Can I enter a negative numerator?
Yes. The calculator converts the positive magnitude, then applies the negative sign to the complete answer. For example, -9/4 becomes -2 1/4.
6. Can I enter a negative denominator?
Yes. A negative denominator is normalized automatically. For example, 9/-4 has the same value as -9/4, so the mixed-number result is -2 1/4.
7. Why is zero not allowed as a denominator?
Division by zero is undefined. A denominator tells how many equal parts form one whole. Zero cannot create a valid number of equal parts.
8. Does the calculator keep proper fractions unchanged?
Yes. A proper fraction, such as 5/9, stays 5/9. Writing 0 5/9 is mathematically valid but less common and less clear.
9. How is the decimal value calculated?
The decimal is found by dividing the numerator by the denominator. It is displayed to up to ten decimal places, with unnecessary ending zeros removed.
10. Can I download the result?
Yes. After a successful conversion, Download CSV saves the result as a spreadsheet-ready file. Save or Print PDF opens your browser print dialog for a printable copy.
11. How can I verify a mixed-number answer?
Multiply the whole number by the denominator. Add the remaining numerator. Put that total over the denominator. The resulting improper fraction should match the original value.