a negative number
signed: its value can be less than zero unsigned: its value cannot be less than zero example: 16 bit signed: -32768 .. 32767 16 bit unsigned: 0 .. 65535
less than zero, greater than the requred return
#include<stdio.h> int main() { int num; do { scanf ("Enter a number (0 to exit): %d", num); if (num>0) printf ("The number is positive.\n"); else if (num<0) printf ("The number is negative.\n"); else printf ("The number is zero, neither positive nor negative\n"); } while (num); return 0; }
Mechanical advantage: Class-I lever . . . can be any positive number Class-II lever . . . always less than ' 1 ' (and more than zero) Class-III lever . . . always more than ' 1 '
The least possible is no iterations: for (x=0; x<max; ++x) { // ... } In the above example, if max is less than or equal to zero then the body of the loop will not execute.
any negative number is less than zero
A negative number is less than zero.
YES, and any number less than Zero is a Negative Number.
Anything less than zero would be a negative number.
A number greater than zero is called a positive number, while a number below zero is called a negative number.
Zero is more than, not less than the number negative 1.
A negative number
There is no whole number less than zero.
Numbers less than zero are "negative numbers".
A negative number is a number less than zero (to the left of the number zero, on a standard number-line). It is written with a minus sign. For example, -5 is 5 less than zero.
A negative number is less than zero.
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