⚖️ Topics & explainers · 4 min read
Comparing and ordering numbers: a Class 3 explainer
How Class 3 children compare and order numbers digit by digit, with worked examples and the greatest-number trap that appears in SOF IMO papers.
Comparing numbers is deciding which of two numbers is bigger — and doing it by looking at digits, not by guessing. It sounds simple, but olympiad papers dress it up: ordering a list, finding a number between two others, or building the greatest possible number from given digits.
The idea in one minute
- A number with more digits is always bigger: any 3-digit number beats any 2-digit number.
- If two numbers have the same count of digits, compare from the left — hundreds first, then tens, then ones.
- Stop at the first place where the digits differ; that place decides the winner.
- Ascending means smallest to largest; descending means largest to smallest.
✏️ Warm-up: pick the greatest
Which of these numbers is the greatest?
- A489
- B498
- C449
- D494
Show the answerAnswer: 498
Answer: 498. All four numbers have 4 in the hundreds place, so move to the tens. 498 has 9 tens, 494 has 9 tens too — so compare their ones: 8 beats 4. 489 and 449 have only 8 and 4 tens. The greatest is 498.
✏️ Level up: a number in between
Which number lies between 340 and 350?
- A335
- B348
- C352
- D360
Show the answerAnswer: 348
Answer: 348. A number between 340 and 350 must be bigger than 340 and smaller than 350. 335 is too small, while 352 and 360 are too big. Only 348 fits: 340 < 348 < 350.
✏️ Olympiad twist: build the greatest number
Using each of the digits 3, 9 and 0 exactly once, what is the greatest 3-digit number you can make?
- A930
- B903
- C939
- D390
Show the answerAnswer: 930
Answer: 930. To build the greatest number, put the biggest digit in the biggest place: 9 in the hundreds, then 3, then 0 — giving 930. Note that 939 is a trap: it uses the digit 9 twice, which the question does not allow.
Comparing and ordering has its own set of levels inside LittleMathematicians’s Class 3 Number Sense topic, and the questions get twistier as your child’s mastery climbs — from picking the greatest to building numbers from digits. It is free during early access if you would like to try a level together.
Practice this the fun way
Adaptive levels, exam-pattern mocks and progress you can see — free during early access.
Start free