Stage 6 · Powers, Roots & Real Numbers

6.6  Operating with and Estimating Real Numbers

One number system, one set of rules — and a letter that can stand for any of them.

For ages 12–14 · Intuition before notation
Knowledge point page

Point 2 of 4 in this lesson: 6.6.2 Comparing the size of real numbers

6.6.2 Comparing the size of real numbers

On the number line, the rule for "bigger" could not be simpler: the number farther to the right is the larger one. This is true for every kind of real number — fractions, decimals, negatives, irrationals — because they all share one line. So comparing 5 with 2.3 is really just asking: which point sits farther right?

The trouble is that 5 doesn't announce its decimal. We need a way to decide without trusting a calculator's rounding. Here is the cleanest trick. For two non-negative numbers, squaring preserves their order: if a and b are both ≥ 0, then a < b exactly when < . Squaring is "order-friendly" on the non-negative side of the line. So compare the squares instead — and the square of a square root is wonderfully easy.

Square both: (5 = 5, and (2.3)² = 5.29. Since 5 < 5.29, we conclude 5 < 2.3. The square root sits just to the left of 2.3 — exactly what the hero picture showed.

Squaring turns a hard comparison into an easy one: compare the areas 5 and 5.29. The bigger area belongs to the bigger side, so 2.3 > 5.
Watch out

The squaring trick is for non-negative numbers only. With negatives it flips: −3 < −2, yet (−3)² = 9 > (−2)² = 4. Farther left can have a bigger square. When negatives are in play, fall back to the number line: farther right wins.

Worked example — trap it instead

Prefer not to square? Trap 5 in a shrinking range. Since 2.2² = 4.84 < 5 and 2.3² = 5.29 > 5, we know 2.2 < 5 < 2.3. The upper trap is 2.3 itself, so 5 < 2.3. Same conclusion, a different road.

🎮 Try itCompare two reals by squaring

Pick a radicand for n and a decimal d. The widget squares both, places them on the line, and reports <, > or =.

√n, choose n 5
decimal d 2.3
eastmath.com · 6.6 Operating with and Estimating Real Numbers · 6.6.2 Comparing the size of real numbers