If the integer is positive, then you plot it at a distance of that many units to the right of the origin (zero-point). If the integer is negative, the point is to the left of the origin.
The absolute value is the distance form zero. It is always positive.
Zero is a rational number and an integer.
Zero is neither positive or negative.
Any integer raised to the power of zero is 1.
The number itself tells you the distance from zero. So the integer "15" is 15 units from zero. Same goes for the integer –15, just on the other side.
Its absolute value.
Its absolute value.
any integer and the negative of that integer... for example 3 and -3 are the same distance from 0
If the integer is positive, then you plot it at a distance of that many units to the right of the origin (zero-point). If the integer is negative, the point is to the left of the origin.
No, zero is an integer but it is neither a postiive nor a negative integer.
The absolute value is the distance form zero. It is always positive.
A positive integer is an integer to the right of zero on the number line. It is more then zero
Zero is a rational number and an integer.
A positive integer is an integer to the right of zero on the number line. It is more then zero
Zero is neither positive or negative.
The absolute value of a number IS its distance from zero: not greater nor less than it.