Including 32 and 53 = 22 whole numbers in betweenNot including 32 and 53 = 20 whole numbers in between
Yes - but only if the domain is restricted. Normally the domain is the whole of the real numbers and over that domain it must have at least one real zero.
96 cannot lie between two consecutive whole numbers.
136 cannot lie between two consecutive whole numbers.
Only 5 whole numbers:6, 7, 8, 9, and 10.
They are all numbers
The answer depends on the domain. If the domain is non-negative real numbers, then the range is the whole of the real numbers. If the domain is the whole of the real numbers (or the complex plane) , the range is the complex plane.
Counting numbers are a proper subset of whole numbers which are the same as integers which are a proper subset of rational numbers.
Decimal products are numbers that are the result of multiplication procedures and are not whole numbers. Decimal quotients are numbers that are the result of division procedures and are not whole numbers.
-- Every whole number is a rational number. -- Any whole number divided by any whole number (except zero) produces a rational number.
The domain of cosine is all real numbers, its range is [-1,1], and its period is 2π radians.
Infinitely many. The normal distribution is applicable to a continuous variable whose domain is the whole of the real numbers. Infinitely many. The normal distribution is applicable to a continuous variable whose domain is the whole of the real numbers. Infinitely many. The normal distribution is applicable to a continuous variable whose domain is the whole of the real numbers. Infinitely many. The normal distribution is applicable to a continuous variable whose domain is the whole of the real numbers.
The domain and range can be the whole of the real numbers, or some subsets of these sets.
The domain can be anything you like, from the whole of the real numbers to just a single value.
The term "whole number" is somewhat ambiguous. It MAY refer to integers; or it MAY refer only to non-negative integers ("counting numbers").
The whole of the Real numbers, or even the whole of the complex plane.
Consecutive whole numbers have no other whole numbers between them.