You know what? Today I decided to tackle something basic but honestly, sometimes you just need to go back to the roots, right? So I thought, let’s figure out how to split 4 evenly among 3. Sounds simple, but I wanted to write down every single step I took, like actually doing it live on paper.

Grabbing My Tools
First thing I did was grab a blank piece of paper and a pen. No calculator allowed for this one – pure brain and pen power. Wrote down the big question right in the middle of the page: 4 ÷ 3. Stared at it for a second. Okay, let’s break this down.
Thinking About How Division Works
I remembered the core idea: division is about splitting one number into a certain number of equal parts. Here, I have 4 things, and I need to split them equally into 3 groups. Can I split 4 whole things perfectly into 3 groups? My gut said probably not without pieces, but let’s try it step by step anyway.
Started visualizing it. If I have 4 apples and 3 friends, how many whole apples does each friend get? Well:
- Friend 1 gets 1 apple.
- Friend 2 gets 1 apple.
- Friend 3 gets 1 apple.
Counted them up: 1 + 1 + 1 = 3 apples handed out. But I started with 4! So I’ve got 1 apple left sitting there on the table.
Dealing with the Leftover
What do we do with this poor leftover apple? We gotta give each friend a fair share of it too, right? This leftover part is the remainder. So each friend got 1 whole apple, and there’s 1 apple left. We say: 4 divided by 3 equals 1 with a remainder of 1. Wrote that down clearly: 4 ÷ 3 = 1 R1.

But I wasn’t satisfied. What if we split that leftover apple? That’s where things get interesting.
Splitting the Leftover
Picked up my pen again. Okay, one apple left. I need to split this one apple equally among the 3 friends.
This means I’m dividing 1 by 3 now. 1 ÷ 3. How do you split one thing into three equal pieces?
Started drawing. Imagine cutting that apple into three slices. Each slice is one-third of the apple. So, each friend gets 1/3 of the leftover apple.
Putting it all together: Each friend already has 1 whole apple (from the first part). Now they each get an additional 1/3 of an apple. So, their total share is: 1 + 1/3.

Wrote that out: 1 whole + 1/3.
The Full Answer (The Reality Check)
So, each friend ends up with 1 and 1/3 apples. In decimal land, that’s 1.333… and those 3s just keep going on forever! That little dot-dot-dot means it’s a repeating decimal. It never truly stops.
Put my pen down. The final answer when writing it as one number is this never-ending 1.333…, which we can also write as 1.3 to show the 3 repeats forever.
Boom. That’s the journey of splitting 4 into 3 equal parts. You either get 1 full share each with one leftover piece (remainder), or you accept that everyone gets about 1.333… apples each, which is more precise but kinda messy. Both ways are correct, just depends how detailed you wanna get! Simple sometimes isn’t so simple when you poke it, huh?