No. Zero is the complete absence of any value and is only used as a place-holder. That is, when used in a value such as the decimal value 102, the zero denotes the complete absence of any tens. The value 0, by itself, therefore denotes the complete absence of all values.
Wiki User
∙ 10y agoWiki User
∙ 13y agoYes it does. Especially in computers.
The value of zero is zero. Zero is always going to have a value of zero.
of course it has - a value of zero - so if something times zero is zero - it must have a value
A blank cell has a numeric value of zero.
The only number whose absolute value is zero is zero. This is because a number's absolute value is its distance from zero on the number line.
If there are no non-zero digits, the value is zero.
zero
No. It has a value of zero.
Yes, zero have a value because it can make the biggest number a zero by multiplying.
There is no negative of zero, nor is there a positive. Zero is no value, hence it has no positive or negative value.
The value of zero is always zero. The zero in 890973 is in the thousands place.
The absolute value of zero is zero. The absolute value of any other real number - or even of any other complex number - is different from zero.
The absolute value of zero is zero. The absolute value of any other real number - or even of any other complex number - is different from zero.