When zero is divided by a non-zero integer, the quotient is always zero. This is because dividing zero by any number indicates how many times that number can fit into zero, which is none. Therefore, the result of the division is 0.
Zero, unless the divisor is 0 in whichcase the quotient is not defined.
Yes, that is how a rational number is defined.
Two integers can yield a quotient of zero when the numerator is zero and the denominator is any non-zero integer. For example, the integers 0 and 5 produce a quotient of 0 when 0 is divided by 5 (0 ÷ 5 = 0). However, dividing by zero is undefined, so the denominator cannot be zero.
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.
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.
Two integers can yield a quotient of zero when the numerator is zero and the denominator is any non-zero integer. For example, the integers 0 and 5 produce a quotient of 0 when 0 is divided by 5 (0 ÷ 5 = 0). However, dividing by zero is undefined, so the denominator cannot be zero.
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.