Zero and the negative numbers.
It is a non-integer. It can be a rational fraction (in decimal or rational form); it can be an irrational number (including transcendental numbers); it could be a complex number or a quaternion.
Non-integers are fractions, decimal numbers, and irrational numbers. Integers are positive and negative whole numbers.
It most certainly can.
.567
Well a non-integer is basically a not a number. It can be a variable, symbol and etc.
non integer rational numbers means the numbers in p/q form and this value is not a perfect integer. ex: 22/7
Yes, the domain represents all the x values on a graph. Since these x values can be non-integral numbers, the domain can contain non-integral numbers.
Any integer divided by a non-zero integer is rational.
3.9
Zero and the negative numbers.
The integers are the numbers {0, 1, 2, 3, ...} and the numbers {-1, -2, -3, 4, ...}. That is, they are all of the "whole" numbers, their negatives, and zero. A non-zero integer is any integer except 0.
It is a non-integer. It can be a rational fraction (in decimal or rational form); it can be an irrational number (including transcendental numbers); it could be a complex number or a quaternion.
Non-integers are fractions, decimal numbers, and irrational numbers. Integers are positive and negative whole numbers.
No, natural numbers only include non-negative integers.
Depends on your definition of "numbers" - basically, every integer greater than one is either composite or prime. Therefore there are many numbers that are not composite or prime: 1, or 0, any negative number, any positive real non-integer, any complex number with imaginary part non-zero
It most certainly can.