Positive x Positive =Positive Positive x Negative= Negative Negative x Positive= Negative Negative x Negative =Positive
When multiplying integers, multiplying by the same sign will always produce a positive integer. Such as a negative times a negative equals a positive. If the signs are different then the product will be a negative.
The rules are not the same.Multiplication is commutative whereas division is not.Multiplication is associative whereas division is not.
They aren't. The rules are the same as those for adding/subtracting or multiplying integers. Just be careful of the decimal point's location.
Yes, when multiplying integers, the rules for signs apply consistently. If both integers have the same sign (either both positive or both negative), the product is positive. If the integers have different signs (one positive and one negative), the product is negative. This rule is fundamental in arithmetic involving integers.
Placing a question mark at the end of a phrase does not make it a sensible question. Try to use a whole sentence to describe what it is that you want answered. Your "question" sheds no light on what rules for integers you are interested in: rules for addition, subtraction, and so on; rules for multiplying numbers with integer indices, and so on.
Because it is.
The answer depends on which properties are being used to prove which rules.
When multiplying integers, multiplying by the same sign will always produce a positive integer. Such as a negative times a negative equals a positive. If the signs are different then the product will be a negative.
The rules are not the same.Multiplication is commutative whereas division is not.Multiplication is associative whereas division is not.
They aren't. The rules are the same as those for adding/subtracting or multiplying integers. Just be careful of the decimal point's location.
Yes, when multiplying integers, the rules for signs apply consistently. If both integers have the same sign (either both positive or both negative), the product is positive. If the integers have different signs (one positive and one negative), the product is negative. This rule is fundamental in arithmetic involving integers.
Placing a question mark at the end of a phrase does not make it a sensible question. Try to use a whole sentence to describe what it is that you want answered. Your "question" sheds no light on what rules for integers you are interested in: rules for addition, subtraction, and so on; rules for multiplying numbers with integer indices, and so on.
Adding integers, if they have the same sign, add their absolute values and keep the same sign. Subtracting, change the sign of the 2nd number and the add using rules of addition. Multiplying and dividing, Divide the absolute values, if the signs are the same the answer is positive, if the signs are different the answer is negative.
In every possible way- because whole numbers and integers are the same.
2x2=5
(2)(4)(-3)
It is a negative integer. Its value will depend on the seven integers that you start with.