Original number:
Significant figures count:
Rounded to specified sig-figs:
The Significant Figures (Sig Fig) Calculator helps students determine the number of meaningful digits in a measured or calculated value, format numbers to a specified number of significant figures, and perform arithmetic with appropriate rounding rules. This tool teaches the rules of significant figures, shows step-by-step rounding, and helps maintain proper precision in lab reports, homework, and scientific calculations.
Middle- and high-school students, college science students, lab technicians, and anyone learning or applying rules of significant figures when reporting measurements and performing calculations.
Problem: How many significant figures in 0.03040?
Step 1: Leading zeros are not significant → ignore "0.0".
Step 2: Remaining digits "3040": zeros between and trailing in decimal are significant → digits: 3, 0, 4, 0 = 4 sig figs.
Problem: (4.56 × 1.4) → how many sig figs?
Step 1: 4.56 has 3 sig figs; 1.4 has 2 sig figs → final result must have 2 sig figs.
Step 2: Calculate precisely then round: 4.56 × 1.4 = 6.384 → round to 2 sig figs → 6.4.
Problem: 12.11 + 0.3 + 1.234 = ?
Step 1: Determine decimal precision: 12.11 (hundredths), 0.3 (tenths), 1.234 (thousandths). Least precise = tenths.
Step 2: Sum precisely: 12.11 + 0.3 + 1.234 = 13.644 → round to tenths → 13.6.
1. How do I treat exact counts?
Exact counts (like 12 eggs) or defined conversion factors are considered to have infinite significant figures and do not limit precision in calculations.
2. What if I get ambiguous trailing zeros?
Use scientific notation or include a decimal point to clarify (e.g., 1500. has four sig figs; 1.50 × 10³ has three sig figs).
3. Which rounding rule should I use for a trailing 5?
Check your instructor or lab manual. Bankers' rounding (round-to-even) reduces cumulative bias, but many classroom settings accept "round 5 up." Be consistent.
4. Should I round intermediate results?
No — keep extra guard digits during intermediate steps and round only the final reported result.
5. How does scientific notation help?
It removes ambiguity about trailing zeros and makes it easy to state the intended number of significant figures clearly.
6. Can the calculator handle complex expressions?
The tool supports common arithmetic expressions. For advanced symbolic algebra with sig-fig-aware simplification, use a CAS with custom precision handling.
7. Do sig figs apply to logarithms or exponentials?
For logs and exponents, special rules apply (e.g., number of decimal places in log results relates to sig figs of input); consult your course guidance and use the tool’s advanced mode if available.
8. How many sig figs should lab data have?
Report measurements consistent with the resolution of your instrument; usually 2–3 sig figs for many lab instruments, but follow your lab manual.
9. Does the calculator handle unit conversions?
Yes — but ensure conversions are handled as exact factors when applicable (e.g., 1 in = 2.54 cm is exact by definition in some contexts) so they do not incorrectly limit sig figs.
10. Is this a replacement for learning the rules?
No — the calculator is a learning and checking tool. Understanding why and how sig figs work is essential for correctly reporting scientific data.
This Significant Figures Calculator is intended for educational support and practical rounding guidance. Follow your teacher's, lab's, or publisher's specified conventions for rounding and reporting; the tool helps enforce consistency but does not replace official course or laboratory policies.
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