No. This is because absolute values are always positive.
For example: |2|=2 absolute value
Additive inverse means the opposite sign of that number so 2's additive inverse is -2. But sometimes if the number is -2 then the additive inverse equals the absolute value. therefore the answer is sometimes
-0.9000000000000004
The absolute value of A
The absolute value of A
yes
True
The absolute value of a number and its additive inverse are the same.
The answer depends on whether the "opposite" means the multiplicative inverse or the additive inverse.
| -x | = |x|
One example would be a Galois Field size 4 (ie GF(4)). Here, the elements are {0,1,2,3} and every element is its own additive inverse.
It's 1000. The absolute value of zero or any positive number is itself, while the absolute value of a negative number is the opposite, or additive inverse.
The opposite of the absolute value of -8 is -8. This assumes that "opposite" refers to additive inverse, although there is no justification for such an assumption.
The additive inverse for a number is its negative value. The sum of an integer and its additive inverse is zero. For the example (5), the additive inverse would be (-5).
In Real numbers, each is the additive inverse of the other.
the absolute value
Any number (other than 0), and its additive inverse.
It is the number with the same magnitude (absolute value) and the opposite sign.
The absolute value of 17 is 17 itself, as absolute value measures the distance of a number from zero on the number line, regardless of its sign. The opposite of a number refers to its additive inverse. Therefore, the opposite of the absolute value of 17 is -17.