Fraction Calculator
Mixed Numbers Calculator
Simplify Fractions Calculator
Decimal to Fraction Calculator
Fraction to Decimal Calculator
Big Number Fraction Calculator
Use this calculator if the numerators or denominators are very big integers.
What Is a Fraction?
A fraction represents a part of a whole. Whenever a whole thing is divided into equal parts and we take some of those parts, we use a fraction to describe how many parts we have taken.
A fraction is written in the form of numerator over denominator, separated by a horizontal line.
Denominator — the bottom number. It tells you into how many equal parts the whole is divided.
Example: In 58, the numerator is 5 and the denominator is 8. The whole is divided into 8 equal parts and we are considering 5 of them.
Half, One-Third, and Quarter
Three of the most common fractions have their own names:
| Name | Fraction | Meaning | How many make a whole? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Half | 1/2 | Whole divided into 2 equal parts; 1 part taken | 2 halves = 1 whole |
| One-third | 1/3 | Whole divided into 3 equal parts; 1 part taken | 3 thirds = 1 whole |
| Quarter | 1/4 | Whole divided into 4 equal parts; 1 part taken | 4 quarters = 1 whole |
Writing Fractions for Shaded Parts — Practice
(a) A rectangle is divided into 5 equal parts and 2 parts are shaded.
Denominator = 5 (total parts) | Numerator = 2 (shaded parts) →
Fraction = 25
(b) A shape is divided into 9 equal parts and 4 parts are shaded.
Denominator = 9 | Numerator = 4 →
Fraction = 49
(c) A strip is divided into 12 equal parts and 7 parts are shaded.
Denominator = 12 | Numerator = 7 →
Fraction = 712
Equivalent Fractions
Equivalent fractions are different fractions that represent the same portion of a whole. They look different but have the same value.
Simplifying Fractions to Lowest Form
Simplifying a fraction means writing it in its simplest form — where the numerator and denominator have no common factor other than 1. You do this by dividing both the numerator and denominator by their common factors, one at a time, until no common factor remains.
Factors of 84: 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 7, 12, 14, 21, 28, 42, 84
Greatest common factor (GCF) = 28
Like and Unlike Fractions
Example: 310, 710, 110 — all have denominator 10.
Example: 25, 38, 411 — all have different denominators.
Comparing Fractions
Comparing Like Fractions
When fractions have the same denominator, compare only their numerators. The fraction with the larger numerator is the greater fraction.
(a) Compare 513 and 913
Denominators are the same (13). Compare numerators: 5 < 9.
(b) From the group below, identify the smallest and greatest fraction:
4/15, 11/15, 6/15, 2/15, 9/15
All have denominator 15. Compare numerators only:
Smallest numerator = 2 → Smallest fraction = 2/15
Greatest numerator = 11 → Greatest fraction = 11/15
Comparing Unlike Fractions
When fractions have different denominators, use the cross-multiplication method. Multiply the numerator of the first fraction by the denominator of the second, and vice versa. Then compare the two products.
(a) Compare 37 and 511
(b) Compare 79 and 45
Ordering Fractions
Ordering Like Fractions
All denominators are 17. Compare numerators: 3, 6, 8, 14.
Ordering Unlike Fractions with the Same Numerator
— The greater the denominator, the smaller the fraction.
— The smaller the denominator, the greater the fraction.
All numerators are 4. Compare only the denominators: 6, 11, 3, 8, 15.
Proper and Improper Fractions
Examples: 3/7 | 5/12 | 8/15 | 11/20
Examples: 7/3 | 12/5 | 15/8 | 20/11
Examples: 2 3/4 | 5 1/6 | 3 7/9
(a) 11/4 — Numerator 11 > Denominator 4 → Improper fraction
(b) 6/13 — Numerator 6 < Denominator 13 → Proper fraction
(c) 3 5/8 — Whole number 3 and proper fraction 5/8 → Mixed fraction
(d) 9/9 — Numerator = Denominator → Improper fraction (value = 1 whole)
Converting Improper Fractions to Mixed Fractions
Divide the numerator by the denominator. The quotient becomes the whole number, the remainder becomes the new numerator, and the denominator stays the same.
Converting Mixed Fractions to Improper Fractions
Multiply the whole number by the denominator, then add the numerator. Write that result over the original denominator.
Adding Like Fractions
To add like fractions (same denominator): add only the numerators and keep the denominator the same. Then simplify if possible.
Subtracting Like Fractions
To subtract like fractions: subtract only the numerators and keep the denominator the same. Then simplify if possible.