Zero, unless the divisor is 0 in whichcase the quotient is not defined.
Yes, that is how a rational number is defined.
No. The second integer MUST be non-zero.
Any integer can be divided by any non-zero integer, and the result is a rational number.
The answer is 0 as long as the number you're dividing by is a non-zero number.
Zero, unless the divisor is 0 in whichcase the quotient is not defined.
Any integer divided by a non-zero integer is rational.
Yes, that is how a rational number is defined.
Let N be any non-zero integer. Then 58*N divided by N will always give 58 as their quotient.
No.
No. The second integer MUST be non-zero.
Any integer can be divided by any non-zero integer, and the result is a rational number.
The answer is 0. 0 divided by any non-zero number gives the answer 0. Division by 0 is not defined.
yes
Yes, rational fractions consist of one integer divided by a non-zero integer.
Multiply both the numerator (top) and the denominator (bottom) of the quotient by any non-zero integer or divide both by any common factor. You will have an equivalent quotient.
The answer is 0 as long as the number you're dividing by is a non-zero number.