Saying "positive" means "greater than zero".
Saying "non-negative" is a shortcut to saying "greater than or equal to zero".
Non-negative includes zero, positive does not.
No because one will get a positive number and the other will be negative
The absolute value of a number is always nonnegative.
to find the difference between a negative number and a positive number, you do the same thing as you would do for a positive and positive number. You just subtract the smaller number (which would of course be the negative) from the larger number (the positive). example: difference between 7 and -4 7 - (-4) = 11
the difference between a postive and a postive number is a postive or a negative.
Non-negative includes zero, positive does not.
No because one will get a positive number and the other will be negative
it doesn't negative so yes DU
The absolute value of a number is always nonnegative.
to find the difference between a negative number and a positive number, you do the same thing as you would do for a positive and positive number. You just subtract the smaller number (which would of course be the negative) from the larger number (the positive). example: difference between 7 and -4 7 - (-4) = 11
An integer is a whole number. Nonnegative mean not negative. A nonnegative integer is a whole number that is not a negative number. For example, 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5,....
the difference between a postive and a postive number is a postive or a negative.
1
The difference between two numbers is the result of a subtraction. This can be either positive or negative, depending on which number is greater.
Negative numbers are below zero whereas positive are above zero.
The unique nonnegative square root of a nonnegative real number. For example, the principal square root of 9 is 3, although both -3 and 3 are square roots of 9.
90