A quotient of integers is the result of dividing one integer by another. When dividing two integers, the result may be a whole number if the division is exact, or a decimal/fraction if there is a remainder. For example, when dividing 10 by 2, the quotient is 5, which is also an integer.
* The quotient of two positive integers or two negative integers is positive. * The quotient of a positive integer and a negetive integer is negetive.
No.
Quotient positive: Both integers have the same sign: both positive or both negative. Quotient zero: The first integer is 0. Quotient negative: The integers have opposite signs: one positive and one negative.
1/4
It is: 273/50 = 5.46 which is the quotient of two integers
-- If the two integers have the same sign, their quotient is positive. -- If the two integers have different signs, their quotient is negative.
A quotient of integers is the result of dividing one integer by another. When dividing two integers, the result may be a whole number if the division is exact, or a decimal/fraction if there is a remainder. For example, when dividing 10 by 2, the quotient is 5, which is also an integer.
When the quotient of two integers is positive, either both integers are positive or both negative. When the quotient of two integers is negative, one of the integers is positive and one negative. When the quotient of two integers is zero, the first integer is zero and the second one is anything but zero.
* The quotient of two positive integers or two negative integers is positive. * The quotient of a positive integer and a negetive integer is negetive.
As a quotient of two integers!
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Here are a few familiar quotients of integers:1/22/33/47/10The quotient of two integers is seldom an integer.
The quotient has a positive sing in that case.
If both integers are positive or both negative then the quotient is positive. If they are one of each then the quotient is negative.
No. An irrational number cannot be expressed as the quotient of two integers. 35.6 = 356/10 and both 356 and 10 are integers. Hint: A terminating decimal is never irrational.
Because terminating or repeating decimals can be written as the quotient of two integers a/b, where b is not equal to zero.