I am a high school student and there is something I want to ask about the application of digital sums.
Let's say there is a fraction "520/7", let 520/7=a, so 520= a × 7, so if we now calculate the digital sums, it would be like 7= a × 7 , it means the digital sum of a should be 1 and nothing else so it means the remainder of this fraction on dividing by 9 is 1, but when we calculate the answer we see that it results in a repeating and infinite rational no. Which is 74.285714285714...and so on, which do not have any SINGLE digital sum as it keeps on changing as we add more and more digits. But our proof says it should be 1? So what's going on? Also when we say the digital sum of any no. is same as the remainder we get when we divide that no. By 9 but is it applicable for fractions as well? Because let's say there is a no. 18.225, if we divide this by 9 the remainder will be 0.225 and not 9, so this statement seems to be applicable on only integers. Am I right? I am not much aware about the modular arithmetic so please explain this in simpler terms. I just want to know can we apply the digital sum on fractions to verify if the result also have the same digital sum of not?