No.
negative*negative=positive negative/positive=negative negative\negative=positve negative-positive=change the sign to a plus and then change the number after the sign and get your answer negative +positive=which ever numbr is bigger minus positive+positive=positive
If ever you have an odd number of negative numbers, the product will always be a negative number. So the answer to this question is negative.
No.
No. An absolute value will always be positive, as it is a measurement of distance from zero on a number line.* * * * *Pedantically, not quite! It will always be non-negative: it can be 0.
No.
negative*negative=positive negative/positive=negative negative\negative=positve negative-positive=change the sign to a plus and then change the number after the sign and get your answer negative +positive=which ever numbr is bigger minus positive+positive=positive
The absolute value is only ever positive. * * * * * Or 0.
If ever you have an odd number of negative numbers, the product will always be a negative number. So the answer to this question is negative.
To change a negative number into a positive number, you can simply remove the negative sign. For example, if you have -3, removing the negative sign would give you 3, which is the positive form of the number.
No, it cannot.
When ever there is any number or numbers in a / / that means that it is positive so the answer is positive five.
no number can be raised to a power and equal 0 (x^y can never = 0). e is positive (about 2.7) and any positive number can not be raised to a power and equal negative (positive number X positive number = positive number)
No.
No. An absolute value will always be positive, as it is a measurement of distance from zero on a number line.* * * * *Pedantically, not quite! It will always be non-negative: it can be 0.
Real numbers are composed of rational and irrational numbers. Integers are part of the group (set) of rational numbers. And the integers are composed of the counting numbers (1, 2, 3, ...) and their negative counterparts (-1, -2, -3, ...). Oh, almost forgot. There is one more integer that is neither positive or negative. It's the number zero. Zero is an integer (neither positive or negative). The smallest real number ever is zero.
Since an array cannot contain a negative number of items, the size of an array must be at least 0. So if you ever tried to retrieve the element at a negative index in an array, it would automatically be understood to be out-of-bounds.