0. If zero is in any part of a fraction, its zero.
-7/10th
Then B is to the left of A on the number line.
Any number divided by itself. (except for zero, which drives mathematicians nuts)
To understand this, look at what happens as the denominator approaches zero. Remember that you can always multiply the numerator and denominator by the same amount (which is equivalent to multiplying the entire fraction by 1):1/1 = 11/.1 = (1x10)/(.1x10) = 10/1 = 101/.01 = (1x100)/(.01x100) = 100/1 = 1001/.001 = (1x1000)/(.001x1000) = 1000/1 = 1000Notice that as the denominator gets smaller, the value of the fraction gets larger. As the denominator goes to zero, the numerator becomes infinitely large. Many people either have no use for, or are uncomfortable with, the concept of infinity, so they say that a fraction with zero in the denominator is undefined.Now consider that the numerator and denominator are both algebraic functions, rather than numeric values; for example let the numerator be (4 - z2) and the denominator be (2z - 4). When z = 2, the numerator and denominator both evaluate to zero - but in this case the fraction may still be defined - it depends on which function approaches zero faster - calculus gives us the tools to determine that.
It is at zero = 0
It comes from a ratio of two integers, the second of which is not zero.
zero
It comes from a ratio of two integers, the second of which is not zero.
To graph a negitive . You would go three spaces back from zero.
Any fraction that has a zero as the numerator equals zero. Any fraction that does not have a zero in the numerator would be a nonzero fraction.
The fraction is zero. 0 divided by anything except zero is zero.
The rule is if the numerator is zero than the value of the fraction is zero.
Zero can be neither the numerator nor the denominator of a fraction.
"Zero point" is 0. It is an integer, not a fraction.
-9 over anything but zero is a fraction. Division by zero is undefined.
It is 105.