Adding and Subtracting Integers
Adding and Subtracting Integers
Working with positive and negative integers becomes easy once you understand a few simple rules. You can think of positive numbers as having money, and negative numbers as owing money, or you can use a number line to visualize the math.
Adding Integers
When adding integers, look at their signs to decide what to do:
1. Same Signs (Both Positive or Both Negative)
- Rule: Add their absolute values (the numbers without the signs) and keep the original sign.
- Example: 5+4=9
- Example: −3+(−6)=−9
2. Different Signs (One Positive, One Negative)
- Rule: Subtract the smaller absolute value from the larger absolute value. Then, keep the sign of the number that had the larger absolute value.
- Example: −8+5
- Subtract the absolute values: 8−5=3.
- Since −8 has a larger absolute value than 5, the answer is negative.
- Answer: −8+5=−3
- Example: 6+(−11)
- Subtract: 11−6=5.
- Keep the negative sign from the −11.
- Answer: 6+(−11)=−5
Subtracting Integers
Subtracting an integer is the exact same as adding its opposite. The rule is often remembered as "Keep, Change, Change":
- Keep the first number exactly the same.
- Change the subtraction sign to an addition sign.
- Change the sign of the second number to its opposite.
Mathematically, this is written as: a−b=a+(−b)
Let's look at an example:
- Problem: −15−(−8)
- Keep, Change, Change: Keep −15, change − to +, change −8 to 8.
- New Problem: −15+8
- Apply Addition Rules: Since the signs are different, subtract (15−8=7) and keep the sign of the larger absolute value (negative).
- Answer: −15−(−8)=−7
Using a Number Line
You can also solve these problems using a number line:
- Start at the first number.
- When adding a positive number (or subtracting a negative), move to the right.
- When adding a negative number (or subtracting a positive), move to the left.