Yes.
'0' is the only whole number that is not a counting number. Negative integers do not belong to whole numbers.
No. Factorials can only be placed on positive whole numbers or 0. For example, 0!, 1!, and 6! are all fine, but 2.5! and (-1)! are not. Since factorials can only be placed on whole numbers, that means you will only be multiplying whole numbers. 100! = 100 * 99 * 98 ... * 1; all those numbers are whole numbers, meaning your answer will be a whole number.
Some integers are whole numbers, but only 0 through positive infinity. The negatives are not included in the whole numbers.
Zero (0) is in the set of whole number. The only difference between the set of whole numbers and counting numbers is that the whole numbers contain zero. {0,1,2,3...}
whole numbers are 0,1,2,3,4,5,6 etc. and natural numbers are 1,2,3,4,5,6 etc. so the only difference is that in natural numbers there is no 0
A WHOLE NUMBER IS ANY NUMBER FROM 0 TO INFINITY.
The only difference is that whole numbers include 0 (zero), while natural numbers start with 1 (one). That's it!
only one whole number is not a natural number and it is 0
The only difference is that whole numbers include 0 (zero), while natural numbers start with 1 (one). That's it!
the set of whole numbers less than 0
If you allow fractions and decimals, then there are an infinite number of them. If you only want to talk about whole numbers, then there are only nine of them.
No. The whole numbers are {0, 1, 2, 3, ...}. There are none less than 0.