Ironically, the answer is: infinity
(Infinity is a concept not a number)
Infinity is not a number and so there is no whole number after infinity.
Infinties are actually different sizes-which may sound stupid but the decimal infinity is longer then the whole number infinity-because you can have a much wider variety of combinations of decimal numbers. However, infinties are generally known to be bigger then both a google-plex to the power of a google-plex, or even bigger then a graham's number, which is the biggest number anyone has been able to think of.
Any whole number between -infinity to +infinity including zero.
Infinity
For all whole numbers X = -2, [infinity to - infinity]
whole numbers include numbers from 0 to infinity whereas natural numbers are the numbers from 1 to infinity
A WHOLE NUMBER IS ANY NUMBER FROM 0 TO INFINITY.
No. Whole numbers are infinite, or go on forever. You could say the biggest is infinity, but infinity is not a specific number, so that would not be correct.
Whole numbers are numbers 0, 1, 2, 3, ..., up to infinity. And -1, -2, -3, ... down to "negative" infinity
The smallest single digit whole number, i.e. integer, is -9. The phrase whole number should not be confused with the natural numbers, integers that go from 1 to +infinity. A whole number is any number that is in the set of integers, that is, the group of integers ranging from -infinity to +infinity.
-5 is not a whole number. it is an integer. whole number starts from 0 to infinity.
That could be taken too many ways to really answer. Take a look at these: (In increasing order) Nine Hundred-Ninety Ninety Thousand-Ninety Ninety Duodecillion-Ninety (million is 1, billion is 2, dodecillion is 12) Ninety Googolplex-Ninety Ninety Googleplex Cubed. Infinity times infinity. Infinity Cubed Cubed (infinity to the power of three, then that to the power of three again) Infinity to Infinity (as in to the power of)