No one knows.
we know that integer may be positive or negative and every integer may be prime number or not a prime number, but the common point of these two numbers is that is one factor is common, which is 1.basis of this the smallest division of an integer is 1.
The smallest positive integer is 1 (a positive integer is a whole number: 1, 2, 3, and so on). But zero may also be considered - depending on circumstances: 0, 1, 2, 3, and so on). Though 1 is my answer.
"Whole number" may refer to an integer, or it may refer to a POSITIVE integer. Because of this ambiguity in the definition, it is preferable to talk about integers, positive integers, or non-negative integers, depending on what you mean.
It seems there may be a typo in your question. If you meant to ask about an integer, an integer is a whole number, either positive, negative, or zero, that does not include fractions or decimals.
The rules for multiplying signed numbers may be formulated from the fact that multiplication serves as a shorthand notation for addition. For example, 4 x (−3), which means "4 times negative −3" is the same as the following: (-3) + (-3) + (-3) + (-3) = -12 Therefore, it follows that multiplication of a negative and positive number represents addition of negative numbers. This explanation with further content regarding mulitiplication of signed numbers may be referenced at: http://www.math.info/Arithmetic/Signed_Numbers_Mult
It could be many things. The answer you may be looking for is , a rational number, or an integer.
The product is an integer that may or may not be a counting number.All integers are whole numbers.The counting numbers are {1, 2, 3, ...}The integers are the counting numbers along with 0 and the negative counting numbers, ie {..., -3, -2, -1, 0, 1, 2, 3, ...}The product of two of these is an integer that will be:a negative counting number {..., -3, -2, -1} - the first integer is a counting number, the second is a negative counting numberzero {0} - either, or both, number is zeroa counting number {1, 2, 3, ...} both integers are negative counting numbers.
A negative number is a number whose value is less than zero. It can be an integer or a fraction. A decimal is a way of representing a number in such a way that the place value of each digit is ten times that of the digit to its right. The number may be positive or negative, an integer or a fraction (or mixed).
Because positive numbers are to the right of negative numbers on the number line. If you have two numbers, one the negative of the other, and you add the positive to the negative, you get zero. If you add the positive to zero, you get a positive number. So positive numbers are an increase from zero, which is an increase from negative numbers. A negative number may have a greater absolute value than a positive number, but it will always be less than a positive number.
A number answer can be correctly solved by whatever numbers happen to solve it, with no restrictions as to what type of numbers they may be: fractional, rational, real, etc. An integer answer requires that the result be expressed only as an integer, which is a positive or negative whole number (including zero). As such, integer answers are a subset of number answers.
Whole numbers are integers. Integers are whole numbers.
No, it is a decimal number.