We interrupt this answer to bring you an important bulletin: An integer is a whole number.
Now, back to the answer in progress:
- 32/10An integer is a whole number that can be positive, negative, or zero. Therefore 3.2 is not an integer.
24/32 is a fraction and there is no way to express it as a whole number.
3 does not go into 32 so 32/3 cannot be written as a whole number.
Yes, -32 is an integer. Integers are either positive or negative whole numbers.
An integer is a whole number, for example 3. A square of an integer is that integer multiplied by itself. So, 3 squared (which can also be written as 32) is 3 x 3 = 9.
an integer is a whole number so any fraction or decimal is a non-integer. for example 4 is an integar but 4.865 or 8/32 re not integars
32/4 = 8, a whole number.
32 is a pure number (integer) and is dimensionless.
10 and 2/3
6 and 2/5
In computer programming, a variable can be (among other things) an integer or a long integer. An integer can be any whole number in the range of -32,768 to 32,767 A long integer can be any whole number in the range of -2,147,483,648 tp 2,147,483,647 I have never heard of an "integer" variable being called a "short integer" but it makes a kind of sense. Note: The size of integer types is platform-dependent, but usually: short: 16 bits int: 32 bits (16 in archaic systems: MSDOS OS Windows16) long: 32 bits (64 in unix64) long long: 64 bits
0.32 is a fraction of 32 in 100 32 is an integer number