yes
Edit: Infinity is not a real number though, it simply represents that there is no boundary or end to numbers.
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.
Infinity is not a number and so there is no whole number after infinity.
A WHOLE NUMBER IS ANY NUMBER FROM 0 TO INFINITY.
There is no largest whole number.
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.
Any whole number between -infinity to +infinity including zero.
french
In mathematics, there is no "last number" in the whole number system. The set of whole numbers is infinite, meaning there is no largest whole number. This concept is known as the principle of mathematical induction, which states that for any whole number, there is always a larger whole number.
Ironically, the answer is: infinity (Infinity is a concept not a number)
whole numbers include numbers from 0 to infinity whereas natural numbers are the numbers from 1 to infinity
Infinity, that being said, there are inanities of different size! Graham's number holds the record for the largest number ever used in a serious mathematical proof. You can look it up in the related links.