of course it has - a value of zero - so if something times zero is zero - it must have a value
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∙ 11y agoThe absolute value of zero is zero. The absolute value of any other real number - or even of any other complex number - is different from zero.
The absolute value of zero is zero. The absolute value of any other real number - or even of any other complex number - is different from zero.
Yes, zero have a value because it can make the biggest number a zero by multiplying.
The value of a zero in any number is equal to zero, though in this instance it is in the ten-thousands column.
Any number to the power zero equals 1. A possible exception is zero to the power zero. Some people claim it is equal to zero, others say it equals one, consistent with any other value. Still more say that the result of zero to the power zero is an undefined value. With the possible exception of zero, the statement above holds true for any value.
Zero. The absolute value |n| is positive for any real number. Subtracting it from itself is zero.
The value of zero is zero. Zero is always going to have a value of zero.
The value of any nonzero number raised to the zero power will equal positive one (1).
It indicates the value zero in any base.
No. Zero is the complete absence of any value and is only used as a place-holder. That is, when used in a value such as the decimal value 102, the zero denotes the complete absence of any tens. The value 0, by itself, therefore denotes the complete absence of all values.
The "zero" or "root" of such a function - or of any other function - is the answer to the question: "What value must the variable 'x' have, to let the function have a value of zero?" Or any other variable, depending how the function is defined.
Any number to the power of zero is always equal to 1