The answer depends on what you wish to DO. And since you have not bothered to share that bit of information, I cannot provide a more useful answer.
The examples show that, to find the of two integers with unlike signs first find the absolute value of each integers.
To add two integers with unlike signs: -- Find the difference between their sizes, ignoring their signs. -- Give the difference the sign of the integer with the larger size.
Like signs give a positive answer. Unlike signs give a negative answer.
One rule is that the product of two integers with unlike signs will have a minus sign for the product.
Positive and negative signs are unlike one another.
To add integers with like signs you jut put the positive in front of the answer (you just add and put a positive sign in front of it)
For each pair of such integers, find the difference between the absolute values of the two integers and allocate the sign of the bigger number to it.
If the two signs are the same it is positive but if they are both different itis negative
Depends on how large each integer is. +1-2 or +2-1. Different signs depending on the size of the integers.
The magnitude of the answer is the difference between the two numbers and it has the sign of the integer which has the bigger magnitude. I guess so?
No.For the sum of integers:-- two positives make a positive-- two negatives make a negative-- the sum of mixed signs is the sign of the one with the greater absolute valueFor the product of integers:-- like signs make a positive-- unlike signs make a negative
Step 1: Find the difference of the two numbers (ignoring their signs). Step 2: Give that number the sign of the larger of the two integers. Step 3: There is no step 3, because you are done!