Dividing Integers
Division is the inverse operation of multiplication. So, [latex]15\div 3=5[/latex] because [latex]5\cdot 3=15[/latex] . In words, this expression says that [latex]\mathbf{\text{15}}[/latex] can be divided into [latex]\mathbf{\text{3}}[/latex] groups of [latex]\mathbf{\text{5}}[/latex] each because adding five three times gives [latex]\mathbf{\text{15}}[/latex].
If we look at some examples of multiplying integers, we might figure out the rules for dividing integers.
Division of signed numbers follows the same rules as multiplication. When the signs are the same, the quotient is positive, and when the signs are different, the quotient is negative.
division of signed numbers
The sign of the quotient of two numbers depends on their signs.
Same Signs
- Two positives: Quotient is positive
- Two negatives: Quotient is positive
Different Signs
- Positive & negative: Quotient is negative
- Negative & positive: Quotient is negative
- [latex]-27\div 3[/latex]
- [latex]-100\div \left(-4\right)[/latex]
Just as we saw with multiplication, when we divide a number by [latex]1[/latex], the result is the same number. What happens when we divide a number by [latex]-1?[/latex]
Let’s divide a positive number and then a negative number by [latex]-1[/latex] to see what we get.
When we divide a number by [latex]-1[/latex] we get its opposite.
dividing by [latex]-1[/latex]
Dividing a number by [latex]-1[/latex] gives its opposite.