Because of the the definition of "absolute value".
Because that's the definition of absolute value.
The absolute value of a number is how many spaces the number is away from 0. So if the number was 32, the absolute value would be 32. And if the number was -54, then the absolute value would be 54. ========== The definition of "absolute value" for a number x (written as |x| ) is: |x| = x for x >0 |x| = 0 for x=0 |x| = -x for x<0
Absolute value is the distance between a number and zero, so 10 would have an absolute value of ten since it's 10 away from zero, as well as -10
I would do it that way.
Because of the the definition of "absolute value".
Because that's the definition of absolute value.
Absolute valueThe absolute value of a number is the positive value of that number. For a positive number, it is just the number. For a negative number it is its positive value. So, the absolute value of 5 is 5, and the absolute value of -5 is 5 also. Absolute value is written like this:| - 5 | = 5 with vertical bars around the number.You can think of absolute value as the distance from zero to your number.
Yes, that's correct - by the definition of absolute value, a negative number is converted to its positive counterpart.
The absolute value is only ever positive. * * * * * Or 0.
Absolute value is a measure of distance.
The absolute value of a number is how many spaces the number is away from 0. So if the number was 32, the absolute value would be 32. And if the number was -54, then the absolute value would be 54. ========== The definition of "absolute value" for a number x (written as |x| ) is: |x| = x for x >0 |x| = 0 for x=0 |x| = -x for x<0
Absolute value is the distance between a number and zero, so 10 would have an absolute value of ten since it's 10 away from zero, as well as -10
Yes, by definition
I would do it that way.
no number; absolute value is always positive. The absolute value of a negative number is positive. For example absolute value of -4 is +4
It's positive by definition. That's what the absolute value is.