5 * 6 * 7 = 210
5 + 6 = 11
1 is the smallest positive integer. But if you include negative integers, there is no smallest.
An integer is a whole number. So zero could be the smallest integer.
The integers are 47, 49, 51, and 53. 47 * 53 = 2491
The let statement is: let the smallest of the three integers be x.
The smallest is 121.
1 is the smallest positive integer. But if you include negative integers, there is no smallest.
An integer is a whole number. So zero could be the smallest integer.
The integers are 47, 49, 51, and 53. 47 * 53 = 2491
-- The product is an integer. -- If the original two integers are both positive, then the product is positive. -- If the original two integers have different signs, then the product is negative.
No, if a negative integer is multiplied by a positive integer, the product is negative. However, if both of the integers are either positive or negative, the product is positive.
Yes, by definition, the sum of two integers is always an integer. Likewise, the product and difference of two integers is always an integer.
The let statement is: let the smallest of the three integers be x.
The smallest is 121.
The positive integers are {1, 2, 3, 4, 5, ...}. The smallest one is 1.
Yes, the product of 2 integers are always an integers. ex. -2*3=-6
Infinitely many in both cases.
No. Integers are positive and negative whole numbers (…, -2, -1, 0, 1, 2, …). As there are an infinite number of negative integers as they approach negative infinity (the greatest negative integer being -1), there can be no smallest (negative) integer.