Zero is a whole number if you are referring to the non-negative integers, or all integers.
The term 'whole number' does not have a consistent definition. Various authors use it in one of the following senses:
However there is another opinion:
0 (called "zero" or "nil") means "nothing exists" so 0 cannot be a real number at all.
So the smallest whole number is 1. (Also known as "one" or "unity".)
Because it is the "magnitude" or "size" of the number which is being asked about in this kind of question - and not its "polarity" or "sign" - the previous sentence remains true no matter whether we are considering positive or negative whole numbers.
Yet another opinion
Here are some relevant mathematical statements:
Is there anything proven which actually contradicts the "mathematical hypothesis about the smallest number" which is summarized by those last four statements?
Zero is a natural number.
A decimal is a number out of a whole number that isn't zero or a fraction.
No, a whole number does not have to 0
No. A half is a fraction, it is more than zero but it is not a whole number.
No its not, zero is a whole number but its not natural!!! :)
If zero is added to a whole number the answer would be the whole number because zero is the same as nothing
Zero is a natural number.
A decimal is a number out of a whole number that isn't zero or a fraction.
Zero is both.
it is defined as such.
No, a whole number does not have to 0
A nonzero whole number is a quantity which does not equal zero and number without fractions.
No. A half is a fraction, it is more than zero but it is not a whole number.
No its not, zero is a whole number but its not natural!!! :)
No, a whole number can be negative (or zero).
The nearest whole number is zero.
WHOLE