It is a mathematical impossibility to divide anything by zero.
It is a mathematical impossibility to divide anything by zero.
It is a mathematical impossibility to divide anything by zero.
It is a mathematical impossibility to divide anything by zero.
It is a mathematical impossibility to divide anything by zero.
It is a mathematical impossibility to divide anything by zero.
It is a mathematical impossibility to divide anything by zero.
It is a mathematical impossibility to divide anything by zero.
It is a mathematical impossibility to divide anything by zero.
It is a mathematical impossibility to divide anything by zero.
It is a mathematical impossibility to divide anything by zero.
Zero is a rational number and an integer.
A rational number can be expressed as a fraction or ratio of two integers. Zero is an integer. Therefore, zero is a rational number EXCEPT, that the denominator of a rational number cannot be zero. You can't divide by zero.
It is rational.
Zero (0) is a rational number.
The answer is zero. It is rational, precise, and exact.
It is rational. A rational number is one that can be expressed as one integer over another (p/q) where the bottom number q is not zero. Particularly the bottom number q can be 1, that is p/1 are rational numbers. But any number divided by 1 is the number itself, that is p/1 = p where p is any integer 0 is an integer, thus 0 is a rational number.
Zero is a rational number and an integer.
When a rational numbers is divided by an irrational number, the answer is irrational for every non-zero rational number.
A rational number can be expressed as a fraction or ratio of two integers. Zero is an integer. Therefore, zero is a rational number EXCEPT, that the denominator of a rational number cannot be zero. You can't divide by zero.
It is rational.
Zero (0) is a rational number.
Zero (0) is a rational number, because it is a whole number and an integer.
Zero is a rational number, not imaginary.
The answer is zero. It is rational, precise, and exact.
Zero is the additive identity in the set of rational numbers, meaning that when you add zero to any rational number, the result is the original number itself. For example, if ( r ) is a rational number, then ( r + 0 = r ). This property holds true for all rational numbers, indicating that zero does not change their value when added.
The only such number is zero.
zero