yes it is so 0 1 2 3 4 5 ......and so on
After the null set, the set containing only the number 0 ie {0}.
0 is the only number which is in the set of whole number but not in the natural number
The set {1, pi, -3.9} is one such set.
It could be part of the number line
To graph the solution set for b is not equal to 0 on a number line, you would first place a filled-in circle at 0 to indicate that 0 is not included in the solution set. Then, draw a ray extending to the left and another extending to the right, indicating that the set includes all numbers except 0. No other markings or filled-in circles are needed since all numbers, positive or negative, except 0, are part of the solution set.
Set A is a finite set if n(A) =0 (that is, A is the empty set) or n(A) is a natural number. A set whose cardinality is not 0 or a natural number is called an infinite set.
It is a proper fraction.
i34 is the complex part of the number 0+i34. The real part is 0, so this is a purely imaginary number.
The additive identity for a set is a number (denoted by 0) such that a + 0 = 0 + a = a for all elements a which belong to the set.
The number 5.
It depends on what you consider a natural number. If you consider it to be the set of all integers starting from 1 and going upward, then no, 0 is not a natural number.However, if you consider a natural number to be the set of all non-negative integers, then 0 is included in the set of natural numbers.
Not sure about the set builder notation, but Q = {0}, the set consisting only of the number 0.