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Mathematics

Can you explain why we need ≠ in the definition of a rational number?

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In the definition of a rational number pq\dfrac{p}{q}, we need q ≠ 0 because division by zero is undefined in mathematics.

If we allow q = 0, then p0\dfrac{p}{0} would have no meaningful value, since there is no number that gives p when multiplied by 0 (any number multiplied by 0 gives 0).

For example :

50\dfrac{5}{0} would mean "what number multiplied by 0 gives 5?"

But, since any number × 0 = 0, no such number exists.

Also, 00\dfrac{0}{0} is indeterminate as 0 × any number = 0.

Hence, the condition q ≠ 0 is necessary so that the rational number pq\dfrac{p}{q} has a well-defined value.

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