Both of them are 6.
the absolute value
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.
yes
300. Numbers only change when put in absolute value if they are negative. The absolute value just takes the positive number of all positive and negative numbers.
No, positive numbers do not always have a higher absolute value than negative numbers. The absolute value of a negative number is equal to its positive equivalent. For example, the absolute value of -3 and 3 is both 3.
the absolute value
Yes... that is, if one is the opposite of the other. For example: The absolute value of 6 is 6. The absolute value of -6 is 6. The absolute value is just the units a number is away from its orgin.
The absolute value of -9 is =|-9| = 9 Explanation : Here's how you can picture absolute value: Think of a railroad track with a zero sitting in the middle of it. Every little notch to the left and right of the zero is another number. Negative numbers line up on the left; positive numbers run along the track to the right. So, the number -4.0 is 4 units away from zero. The number -45.3 is 45.3 units away from zero and the number 10 is 10 units away from zero. Therefore, the absolute value of any number is really a positive number (or zero). You identify an absolute value of a number by writing the number between two vertical bars: |number|.
Yes. The absolute value of two numbers is ALWAYS positive. This is because absolute value means "the number of spaces a number is from zero on a number line.
Absolute Value means the distance from 0. I think of it as numbers on a number line, for instance -3 is 3 units from 0. So the absolute value of -99 would just be 99, because that is its distance from 0.
absolute value Save
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.
No it is not true. The absolute value of a number is simply the value of the number with a positive sign.
Subtract the absolute value of the smaller number from the absolute value of the larger number. The answer will have the sign of the larger numbers.
No. The absolute value is the distance a number is from zero. It is always represented by a positive number. The absolute value of any positive number and its negative counterpart is the same.
yes
The absolute value depends on it's "distance" from zero. So if it's to the right (positive) by 5 units, or to the left (negative) by five units, then it's absolute value is 5