It seems to vary depending on who you ask. The definition of the set of whole numbers always includes the positive integers. However, it may also include zero and possibly the set of negative integers.
A whole number is defined as a positive integer (i.e., a value with no decimal or fractional part). However, in practice, most people consider negative integers to be whole numbers as well.
but they are not
yes but not all
No
it has on factional part as an integer
no
A negative integer is a whole number but not a natural number.
no, integer is 0 or positive / negative whole number
Any negative whole number is not a natural number - so it is not "the only".
No. You can subtract two whole numbers and get a negative result. Whole numbers can't be negative.
A negative number can be an integer. An integer is any positive or negative whole number including zero.
You do nothing. A negative number is a whole number.
6 is a whole number -47.03 is a negative number -179 is a negative whole number
Negative 0.6 is not a whole number.
They can be. For example, -3 is a negative whole number.
integers are basically any whole number, a negative integer is a negative whole number...such as -12
Any negative whole number.
Yes. It's the whole number negative 36.
A whole positive or negative number is an integer which has no decimals or fractions.
It is a negative whole number which is the same as an integer
Then the whole number is negative.
No, a whole number can be negative (or zero).
Negative the square root of 36 is -6, which is a whole number.