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The sum of two positive integers can never equal zero.
when you have a negative times a negative it will equal a positive but when you have a negative times a positive it will equal a negative no matter what!
Then they are, simply, two different integers. Any two positive integers will do, according to the specification.Then they are, simply, two different integers. Any two positive integers will do, according to the specification.Then they are, simply, two different integers. Any two positive integers will do, according to the specification.Then they are, simply, two different integers. Any two positive integers will do, according to the specification.
2+2/-2+4
-21
The sum of two positive integers can never equal zero.
No. Two negative integers added together will never equal a positive integer. It is the product of two negative integers that is positive.
The sum of the first 40 even positive integers can be equal to 820.
when you have a negative times a negative it will equal a positive but when you have a negative times a positive it will equal a negative no matter what!
No, that is not true.
Then they are, simply, two different integers. Any two positive integers will do, according to the specification.Then they are, simply, two different integers. Any two positive integers will do, according to the specification.Then they are, simply, two different integers. Any two positive integers will do, according to the specification.Then they are, simply, two different integers. Any two positive integers will do, according to the specification.
Only when you divide or multiply.
2+2/-2+4
1. The only positive integer that equals 9 is 9.
The set of positive integers is {1,2,3,4,5,...}. When referring to numbers, distinct simply means different from each other e.g. 2,6,7 and 9 are distinct positive integers but 2,6,6 and 9 are not distinct since two of them are equal.
There are 80 such integers.
-21