The number 1. Unless the number is 0, in which case, the quotient is not defined.
As long as the number is not zero, the quotient remains unchanged. If the multiplier is zero then the quotient is undefined.
When an integer is divided by 1 same integer number will be the quotient
No. Let's say you have 500 divided by 2. Your quotient would be 250.
9X-X/6
the number is 0
The quotient of a number and 2 is the same as the difference of the number doubled and 3.
As long as the number is not zero, the quotient remains unchanged. If the multiplier is zero then the quotient is undefined.
When an integer is divided by 1 same integer number will be the quotient
810: quotient 1, remainder 1
No. Let's say you have 500 divided by 2. Your quotient would be 250.
no, it simply multiplies the quotient by 1 (the multiplicative identity).
the quotient which is the same as the dividend or divisor
9X-X/6
the number is 0
The answer is always positive. If the signs are the same (positive by positive, negative by negative), then the quotient is always positive. If the signs are different (positive by negative, negative by positive), then the quotient is always negative.
. This is same as half of r.
It would be a positive number. A negative number divided by a negative number would be positive. A positive number divided by a positive number would also be positive. So, the quotient of 2 integers with the same sign will be a positive number, regardless of which sign the two numbers had.