Yes, -1 and 1 are real numbers.
Real numbers consist of Irrational Numbers, rational numbers and integers.
Yes they are real numbers
The unit for real numbers is the number 1.
1
Not whole numbers. Yes to real numbers and integers.
1 = 13; -1 = (-1)3.
Yes they are real numbers
The unit for real numbers is the number 1.
Yes. :S real numbers are real numbers. 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9.
Natural numbers, integers, rational numbers are all part of the real numbers. -1 is an integer (and a rational number), so it is also real.
1
Not whole numbers. Yes to real numbers and integers.
It is an element of the set of real numbers.
Real numbers are all numbers which do not contain "i", when "i" represents the square root of -1. All numbers which do contain "i" are "imaginary numbers" and are not real numbers. This means that all numbers you'd ordinarily use are real numbers - all the counting numbers (integers) and all decimals are real numbers. So in answer to your question, all the real numbers that are not whole numbers are all the decimal numbers - including irrational decimals such as pi.
Real numbers are those which can be placed upon a number line stretching to infinity in both directions. To be "not real" you must be unable to do that. We call "not real" numbers "imaginary" numbers. They are numbers which are derived from the square root of -1. If you think about it, what number can be multiplied by itself and you end up with -1. In the real numbers, there isn't one. So we have imaginary numbers. They are written using Euler's notation where i represents the square root of -1. So, to answer your question, i is a "not real" number.
It is 1, as it is for all complex numbers - which includes real numbers.
Some are and some aren't. 62 is real and rational. 1/3 is real and rational. sqrt(2) is real and irrational. (pi) is real and irrational.
1 = 13; -1 = (-1)3.