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The Real Number System

The real number system is a very complicated . It states that there is a lot of numbers, like a farmer has two sheep so he has +2 sheep but, if he owed someone 2 sheep he would have -2 sheep. There are different sections of the number system.

Natural Numbers

Natural Numbers or "counting numbers" are regular numbers. These kind of numbers go on forever. 0 or zero is a actual natural number, because if you owe someone one dollar and you give it to them you would owe them 0 dollars .

Whole Numbers

Whole numbers are Natural numbers with zero. But this is a story on the number zero . Is it a number or not.

About the Number Zero

What is zero? Is it a number? How can the number of nothing be a number? Is zero nothing, or is it something?

Well, before this starts to sound like a Zen koan, let's look at how we use the numeral "0." Arab and Indian scholars were the first to use zero to develop the place-value number system that we use today. When we write a number, we use only the ten numerals 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, and 9. These numerals can stand for ones, tens, hundreds, or whatever depending on their position in the number. In order for this to work, we have to have a way to mark an empty place in a number, or the place values won't come out right. This is what the numeral "0" does. Think of it as an empty container, signifying that that place is empty. For example, the number 302 has 3 hundreds, no tens, and 2 ones.

So is zero a number? Well, that is a matter of definition, but in mathematics we tend to call it a duck if it acts like a duck, or at least if it's behavior is mostly duck-like. The number zero obeys most of the same rules of arithmetic that ordinary numbers do, so we call it a number. It is a rather special number, though, because it doesn't quite obey all the same laws as other numbers-you can't divide by zero, for example.

Note for math purists: In the strict axiomatic field development of the real numbers, both 0 and 1 are singled out for special treatment. Zero is the additive identity, because adding zero to a number does not change the number. Similarly, 1 is the multiplicative identity because multiplying a number by 1 does not change it.

Integers

Integers are numbers and their negatives. The next generalization that we can make is to include the idea of fractions. While it is unlikely that a farmer owns a fractional number of sheep, many other things in real life are measured in fractions, like a half-cup of sugar. If we add fractions to the set of integers,we get the set of rational numbers.

Rational Numbers

Rational numbers include what we usually call fractions. Notice that the word "rational" contains the word "ratio," which should remind you of fractions. The bottom contains the denominator and the top contains the numerator.

Irrational numbers

These and rational numbers are almost the same only irrational number never stop rational do.

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Comments (2)
#1 by belle, Aug 12, 2008
is there any structure of real number system?
#2 by belle, Aug 12, 2008
is there any structure of real number system?
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