If all the numbers are the same, the set has no range. The range is zero.
Whole numbers are the set of natural or counting numbers inclding zero
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...}
There are several; the most well-known are probably the set of rational numbers without zero, the set of real numbers without zero, and the set of complex numbers without zero.
The set of numbers that consists of the positive numbers, the negative numbers, and zero are integers. There are no fractions in integers.
This set of numbers is called "Whole Numbers".
Range is the greatest of a set of numbers-the least of a set of numbers.
It is the set of all numbers excluding zero.
The set of natural numbers plus zero is the set of all non-negative integers. Please note that the definition for the set of natural numbers is ambiguous. Some definitions include zero, while others exclude it.
the range of a set of numbers is the difference between the highest value and the lowest value
The set of integers, the set of rational numbers, the set of real numbers, the set of complex numbers, ...
The immediate [next] superset is, trivially, the set of natural numbers which consists of the counting numbers and zero. The next significant superset is the set of integers: the counting numbers, their additive inverses (or negatives) and zero.