All integers are rational numbers. As a result, there are no such numbers. There is, therefore, no name for these non-existent numbers.
Chat with our AI personalities
A rational number which is an integer can be simplified to a form in which the denominator is 1. That is not possible for a rational number which is not an integer.
No. To be a rational number it must be an integer over another integer. π is not an integer, nor can it be made into an integer by multiplying it by another integer, thus one twelfth of π is not a rational number.
Yes and yes. It is an integer and so it is also a rational number.
An integer is a whole number. For instance, 1, 2, 3... There is no decimal part. So 23 is an integer. A rational number is a number that can be written as a/b. 23 can be written as 23/1, so 23 is a rational number. Thus, 23 is BOTH an integer and a rational number.
6.3 is a rational number but it is not an integer because only whole numbers are integers.