No.
No, not counting zero,the difference is always positive since minus a minus is plus
Zero is neither positive or negative.
An integer is any negative or positive whole number, or zero.
When the absolute value of the positive integer is the same as the absolute value of the negative one.
Zero counts as neither positive nor negative. It is a neutral integer
No, not counting zero,the difference is always positive since minus a minus is plus
Zero is neither positive or negative.
There are just three possible cases: Positive integer: positive x positive = positive. Negative integer: negative x negative = positive. Zero: zero x zero = zero.
An integer is any negative or positive whole number, or zero.
When the absolute value of the positive integer is the same as the absolute value of the negative one.
No, zero is an integer but it is neither a postiive nor a negative integer.
Zero counts as neither positive nor negative. It is a neutral integer
Zero is neither positive nor negative.
The sum of a negative integer and a positive integer is zero only when the two integers have the same absolute value. For example, if you have -3 (negative integer) and +3 (positive integer), their sum is zero. However, in general, this situation occurs infrequently since it requires specific values. Most of the time, the sum will be a negative integer if the absolute value of the negative integer is greater than that of the positive integer, and a positive integer if the opposite is true.
zero
Neither. It is in between positive and negative but it is still an integer.
The sum of zero and a negative integer can never be zero - it will always be negative and nonzero. Although zero is also an integer, it is neither negative nor positive and cannot be the other integer used.