Any number can be divided by 16 to produce another positive real number. If the quotient is to be a positive integer, the possible numbers are those formed by multiplying 16 by any positive integer.
If A is a prime, then the answer is A^k where k is any positive integer.
yes, any whole number, positive or negative, including zero is an integer.
Any positive integer that is evenly divisible only by itself and one.
Any positive integer that is evenly divisible only by itself and one.
The difference between any numbers is always positive.
No, there is not. Given any positive integer n, n+1 is also a positive integer and it is larger.
no, all negative numbers are smaller than positive numbers
A composite number is a positive integer that has a positive divisor other than one or itself. In other words a composite number is any positive integer greater than one that is not a prime number.
Any number can be divided by 16 to produce another positive real number. If the quotient is to be a positive integer, the possible numbers are those formed by multiplying 16 by any positive integer.
No. All numbers that appear on any given number line are real numbers. To be an integer, a number must not have any fractions or decimals. An integer could be positive or negative, or 0.
pi is not a integer any of the natural numbers (positive or negative) or zero; "an integer is a number that is not a fraction"- since pi has a decimal it isn't considered a integer
If A is a prime, then the answer is A^k where k is any positive integer.
yes, any whole number, positive or negative, including zero is an integer.
1.56 cannot be an integer, since the set of integers do not include any decimal numbers, only whole numbers, negative or positive (including 0).
any positive integer
Yes. "Integer" includes positive numbers, negative numbers, and zero.