zero
The only number whose absolute value is zero is zero. This is because a number's absolute value is its distance from zero on the number line.
The absolute value is 103.
tens
The absolute value of zero is zero. The absolute value of any other real number - or even of any other complex number - is different from zero.
The absolute value of zero is zero.
This is not an equation, it's a number. The two zeros are placeholders for the thousands (103) place and the ten millions (107) place.
The value of zero is zero. Zero is always going to have a value of zero.
of course it has - a value of zero - so if something times zero is zero - it must have a value
Zero.Zero.Zero.Zero.
6
A blank cell has a numeric value of zero.
The only number whose absolute value is zero is zero. This is because a number's absolute value is its distance from zero on the number line.
The absolute value is 103.
If there are no non-zero digits, the value is zero.
Zero is required to put each number into its correct place-value position. For example, in 123, 1 is worth 1 x 100, 2 is worth 2 x 10, and 3 is worth 3 x 1 (multiplying each digit with the value of its position). One position may happen to be empty, as in 103 = 1 x hundred + 0 x ten + 3 x one. Just omitting the zero will give a DIFFERENT result - 13 is NOT the same as 103. The zero, then, is used as a placeholder, to "push" other digits more to the left, to their appropriate position.
Yes, zero have a value because it can make the biggest number a zero by multiplying.
There is no negative of zero, nor is there a positive. Zero is no value, hence it has no positive or negative value.