An integer that divides into another integer exactly is called a Factor.
let x be any integer
a whole number; a number that is not a fraction.
a number consisting of an integer and a proper fraction.
ask your math teacher
An integer is a number which does not have a decimal part at all.
351 is an integer and not a fraction. However, it can be expressed in rational form as 351/1. You can then calculate equivalent rational fractions if you multiply both, its numerator and denominator, by any non-zero integer.
Integer?
"If a number is an integer, then it is a whole number." In math terms, the converse of p-->q is q-->p. Note that although the statement in the problem is true, the converse that I just stated is not necessarily true.
An integer that divides into another integer exactly is called a Factor.
A factor of an integer is another integer which will go into the first evenly.
I showed the teacher how I arrived at a positive integer as the answer to the math problem.
The number zero is both a integer and a whole number. This is taught in math.
An arbitrary integer is basically the same as any integer. If a math problem says: "Let n be an arbitrary integer", it means that n can be any integer. A random integer in other words.
in a math book
It is a negative integer.
An integer is any whole number. It could be positive, zero or negative.