Oh, dude, you're hitting me with the math questions now? Alright, alright. So, an example of an integer that is not a whole number would be -3.5. It's an integer because it's a whole number, but it's not a whole number because of that pesky decimal hanging out at the end. Like, it's like a whole number with a little extra flair, you know?
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An integer is a whole number. Nonnegative mean not negative. A nonnegative integer is a whole number that is not a negative number. For example, 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5,....
For any integer, there is a whole number that is bigger, and for any whole number, there is a integer that is bigger.
There is no such number: every whole number is an integer.
No.No; an integer must be a whole number that is positive or negative.For example, -204, 16, -82, and 79 are all integers.An integer is just a whole number, anything that is not a decimal or a fraction
no, integer is 0 or positive / negative whole number