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You find their difference. The answer has the sign of the number with the larger absolute value.
When adding two integers, the answer will be positive if both integers are positive, or if one is negative but its absolute value is smaller than the absolute value of the positive integer.
The absolute value of an integer is the value of the integer without regard to its sign. The absolute value need not be an integer.
No. Absolute value applies to the set of real numbers.
None. Integers can be negative, absolute values cannot. Absiolute values can be rational or irrational fractions, integers cannot.
Two. +15 and -15 are the only integers with an absolute value of 15.
Yes.
You find their difference. The answer has the sign of the number with the larger absolute value.
When adding two integers, the answer will be positive if both integers are positive, or if one is negative but its absolute value is smaller than the absolute value of the positive integer.
The absolute value of an integer is the value of the integer without regard to its sign. The absolute value need not be an integer.
0
No. Absolute value applies to the set of real numbers.
None. Integers can be negative, absolute values cannot. Absiolute values can be rational or irrational fractions, integers cannot.
Two of them.
Yes, a positive integer and its negative have the same absolute value. For example, +5 and -5 have the same absolute value.
Yes, a positive integer and its negative have the same absolute value. For example, +5 and -5 have the same absolute value.
952 of them.