A positive and negative number with the same magnitude (value) will have their absolute values equal.
An absolute mean is a mean of the absolute magnitude of a function with both positive and negative values.
Fractions make no difference to absolute values.
No. Absolute value applies to the set of real numbers.
This is not strictly true, because an absolute value, and hence the product of two absolute values can be zero. It is, therefore true to say that the product of two absolute values is always non-negative. An absolute value of a number is, by definition, non-negative. And by the definition of multiplication, the product of two non-negative numbers in non-negative.
The absolute value of something is also the square root of the square of that something. This can be used to solve equations involving absolute values.
All numbers have opposites that are the same as their absolute values.
Additive opposites MUST have the same absolute values.
by seeing how far the distance is from the number line
No, absolute values are always positive.
Actually they are; but we often don't think of them that way, or call them that way. Quite often when talking about a "difference", the absolute value is implied - for instance, the "difference" between 5 and 7 is the same as the difference between 7 and 5.
absolute moral values and behavioral or cultural values
It is the mean absolute deviation.
A positive and negative number with the same magnitude (value) will have their absolute values equal.
The absolute value is the distance from 0 on the number line. -5 is 5 away from 0. You cannot have a negative distance, therefore you cannot have a negative absolute value. Absolute values are not ALWAYS positive because absolute values can be zero as well. Zero is not positive nor negative.