A ratio of two integers where the denominator is non-zero can be expressed as ( \frac{a}{b} ), where ( a ) is the numerator and ( b ) is the denominator. For example, if ( a = 4 ) and ( b = 2 ), the ratio is ( \frac{4}{2} ), which simplifies to 2. It's important to ensure that the denominator ( b ) is not zero, as division by zero is undefined.
A ratio with denominator 0 is not defined.
It is not defined.
It is a rational fraction.
When expressed as a ratio of two integers (not intergers!), the simplest form for the integer but not others, has 1 as the denominator.
Rational numbers
A ratio with denominator 0 is not defined.
It is not defined.
It is not defined.
It is a rational fraction.
The denominator cannot be 0 because division by 0 is not defined.
And the denominator is 0
The ratio is not defined.
There is none
When expressed as a ratio of two integers (not intergers!), the simplest form for the integer but not others, has 1 as the denominator.
The ratio of two integers is a fraction that represents the division of one integer by another. As long as the denominator is not equal to zero, the ratio is defined. For example, the ratio of 4 to 2 is 4/2, which simplifies to 2.
Rational numbers
It is a rational fraction.