It isn't. 5 - 10 = -5
The modulus would be described as the distance between, it is without direction and would therefore always be positive.
diffrence will always be positive except when it is zero but is you speak of substraction operation it can be positive negative or zero
It will always be positive.
Addition is an example.
It isn't. 5 - 10 = -5
The modulus would be described as the distance between, it is without direction and would therefore always be positive.
diffrence will always be positive except when it is zero but is you speak of substraction operation it can be positive negative or zero
Yes, the difference between two integers is always a whole number.
NO. It depends on which you are subtracting from which. For example, the difference between 8 and 6 is 2 (8 - 6 = 2) but the difference between 6 and 8 is -2 (6 - 8 = -2).
NO. It depends on which you are subtracting from which. For example, the difference between 8 and 6 is 2 (8 - 6 = 2) but the difference between 6 and 8 is -2 (6 - 8 = -2).
If difference is taken to mean the first number minus the second then the answer can be positive or negative (or zero if the two numbers are the same). For example: the difference between -5 and -3 is -2 while the difference between -3 and -5 is +2.
No. It can be a number between two positive integers.
The difference between any numbers is always positive.
No the product of two integers will not always be a positive, because if you multiply a positive and a negative you'll get a negative.
Yes
It will always be positive.