Maybe stupid question - zero positive or negative ?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around the proposition that among any three real numbers (a, b, c), at least two must share the same sign. Initially, the poster believed this to be true but reconsidered upon realizing that including zero could lead to a scenario where none of the numbers share a sign, such as (0, 0, 0). Participants clarified that zero is neither positive nor negative, which supports the conclusion that the proposition is false. Examples like (1, 0, -1) further illustrate that it is possible to have three real numbers without two sharing the same sign. Ultimately, the consensus is that the statement is false due to the unique nature of zero.
JPC
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Homework Statement



Hi
I have to say true or false, and then demonstrate my answer
"if taking any 3 Real numbers (a, b, c), we have at least 2 of the same sign"

For me its true, i was thinking of creating a triplet (x, y, z), where
x=1 if "a" positive, x=0 if "a" negative, same for y, and z
and show that with the all the (x, y, z) possibilities, you had always 2 of the same sign

But then, i realized, what if one of the reals a, b, c is equal to 0 ?
like if (a, b, c) = (0, 0, 0)

Is zero considered positive or negative, or both ?

If so, i would have to add another value to the reals of the (x, y, z) triplet , 2, which i can then take as positive when i need or as negative when i need
 
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Zero is neither positiive nor negative.
Any real number that is positive is greater than zero, and any negative real number is less than zero.
 
ok thank you
then i must reply false to the proposition "if taking any 3 Real numbers (a, b, c), we have at least 2 of the same sign", because with (0, 0, 0) for example , we have none of the same sign
 
JPC said:
ok thank you
then i must reply false to the proposition "if taking any 3 Real numbers (a, b, c), we have at least 2 of the same sign", because with (0, 0, 0) for example , we have none of the same sign
Right. Another example is (1, 0, -1).
 
ok, thank you, you helped me save time not doing a long and incorrect maths demonstration :)
 
JPC said:
ok thank you
then i must reply false to the proposition "if taking any 3 Real numbers (a, b, c), we have at least 2 of the same sign", because with (0, 0, 0) for example , we have none of the same sign

No. 0 is neither positive nor negative but is "its own sign". A better example is (-1, 0, 1).
 
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0 is non-negative.
 
JG89 said:
0 is non-negative.
Which does not answer the question (which had already been answered). 0 is also non-positive.
 
As others have already said, 0 is neither. 0 is basically the line between positive and negative.
:)
 
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