Want this question answered?
0.
A commonly used abbreviation is: 0 < x < 1 That means that "x" can be between these values. This is actually a shortcut for the combination: 0 < x AND x < 1. If you want to include the extremes, 0 and 1, replace the less-than symbol with the less-than-or-equal-to symbol.
-100
The only numbers used in binary are 0 and 1
You would need infinitely many digits to write all numbers. However, to write all whole number (integers) you would need 4243.
0.
0 7/10
A commonly used abbreviation is: 0 < x < 1 That means that "x" can be between these values. This is actually a shortcut for the combination: 0 < x AND x < 1. If you want to include the extremes, 0 and 1, replace the less-than symbol with the less-than-or-equal-to symbol.
yes it was 0
5 and -5
-100
So the prime numbers don't bump into each other.
0.5, 0.6, 0.7
The only numbers used in binary are 0 and 1
You would need infinitely many digits to write all numbers. However, to write all whole number (integers) you would need 4243.
numbers 0-9, letters a-z, and the dash - symbol.
3,5 and 0