It's short for Zahlen, which is German for "numbers". Why German? Why not?
'W' but if u want integers which are different then it is 'Z'
'z' is used to denote integers in german. 'z' denotes zahlen
They can be represented as a fraction of two integers.
No, 1/2 is not an integer. Integers are the natural numbers (1,2,3,4,...) together with their negatives and zero. Then integers (Z) can be denoted as Z = {...,-3,-2,-1,0,1,2,3,...}.1 over 2 (1/2) is not an integer. Integers are numbers like 1,2,3,4, and -17. Integers do not include fractions.
An irrational number is a number that can't be exactly represented as the ratio of two integers.
The set of integers is represented by Z.
Z is the symbol for integer. It is the initial letter of Zahlen, the German word meaning "number"
Zero
It comes from the German word zahlen.
we represent the letter Z in our sets of numbers. for eg:- Z= 1,7,2,8,3,9,4,5,6
The symbol for the set of integers is Z from the German word "zahl" = integer.
The symbol for the set of integers is Z. This comes from the German Zahl, which means integer.
The symbol for the set of integers is Z and it comes from the German word Zahlen, meaning numbers.
ℤ is the symbol for the set of all integers, that is {..., -2, -1, 0, 1, 2, ...}.
Because Zahlen is German for "numbers."
The symbol is Z from the German word for integers, zahl.
Any symbol can be used to denote a set of integers. The set of all integers is denoted by Z, and the set of natural numbers by N.