the simplest answer to that is that whole numbers do not have decimals or fractions.
Non-examples of decimals include whole numbers (integers) such as 1, 5, -3, and fractions like 1/2, 3/4, and 2/3. Decimals are numbers that include a decimal point and digits to the right of the decimal point, such as 3.14 or -0.75. Non-examples would not have this characteristic and would not be considered decimals in the mathematical sense.
Natural numbers are:counting numbersnon-negative, non-zero integers; positive integersnon-zero whole numbers; positive whole numbers
I'm not sure what you want. You can have 5 and 2 and any non-zero whole number. You can have 10 and any two non-zero whole numbers. You can have any even number, then any multiple of 5, then any non-zero whole number. Or any multiple of ten, then any two non-zero whole numbers. I think I covered the possibilities.
Examples of such numbers are 49, where sqrt(49) = 7, 81, where sqrt(81) = 9. Such numbers are called square numbers.
Non-integers are fractions, decimal numbers, and irrational numbers. Integers are positive and negative whole numbers.
there are a lot of examples of whole numbers 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9. . .
Yes the numbers are not seperated so technically 7.5 is a whole number.
No, whole numbers are defined as non-negative integers.
Whole
some examples of non- negative numbers are = 2 ,4,6,8,10,12,14,16,18,20,22,24,26,28,30,32,34,36,38,40........ and so on till the nth number
Yes, it certainly is! Numbers like 14, 120, 950, and 14007 are examples of whole numbers. Numbers such as 14.5, 27.2 and 9 1/2 (nine and one half) are examples of numbers which are not whole numbers. Another name for a whole number is an "integer".
1
The square roots of negative numbers.
whole numbers, counting numbers, integers...
Pi.
0,1,2,3,4....