No, integers are whole numbers. They don't have decimals.
There are non-zero digits after the decimal point, so it is not an integer of any kind.
yes, any positive or negative number is an integer
Yes. Integers include both positive and negative numbers (and zero). Anything that, when written in decimal, has no digits after the decimal point.
No, if the decimal contains any number other than zero.
Any number that has non-zero digits after the decimal point is NOT an integer.
No. An integer may not have any non-zero digit after the decimal point.
15 is a whole number and an integer. An integer can be positive, negative, or zero, but not a decimal.
Any number that has non-zero digits after the decimal point is NOT an integer.
A non-positive integer is a negative integer. The term refers to any integer (a number that has no decimal part) that is less than zero.It means that it is an integer (whole number), and that it isn't positive. In other words, that includes zero, and negative integers.
That's an integer.
If the integer is positive, then you plot it at a distance of that many units to the right of the origin (zero-point). If the integer is negative, the point is to the left of the origin.
Zero is neither positive or negative.