1,2,3,4,5...
No. One, a counting number, doesn't belong to either of those sets.
Whole numbers are 1,2,3,4..etc frations decimals and other numbers arent. Whole numbers include 0, counting numbers do not. Counting Numbers are also sometimes referred to as Natural Numbers. But the above answer is correct in that none of these sets: Counting, Whole and Integers include fractions or decimals.
The natural numbers (or counting numbers) usually denoted by Z.
they are almost all equivalent - whole numbers also have the number 0, which natural numbers (counting numbers) do not.
The set of counting (natural) numbers is the set of all positive integers, while the set of whole numbers is the set of all positive integers included zero.
The set of counting numbers greater than one.
C. whole numbers can be negative and don't match the other sets
Which 10 counting numbers? There is an infinity of counting numbers.
Many infinite sets appear in mathematics: the set of counting numbers; the set of integers; the set of rational numbers; the set of irrational numbers; the set of real numbers; the set of complex numbers. Also, certain subsets of these, such as the set of square numbers, the set of prime numbers, and others.
Curiously enough, yes.For each non-zero counting number, N, there are two whole numbers, -N and N. And then there is zero. So the number of whole numbers is approximately double the number of counting numbers. However, the count of such numbers - the cardinality of both of the two sets - is "countably infinite" and the property of this infinite value is that multiplying it by any number still gives the same infinity!
No- not exactly. Negative integers are not counting numbers. Positive integers are identified with counting numbers. Many authors like to start with zero as a counting number.
Some integers are positive numbers.Some integers are not positive numbers.Some positive numbers are integers.Some positive numbers are not integers.They are two sets whose intersection is the set of counting numbers.