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The integers (from the Latin integer, literally "untouched", hence "whole": the word entire comes from the same origin, but via French) are formed by the natural numbers including 0 (0, 1, 2, 3 ...) together with the negatives of the non-zero natural numbers (-1, -2, -3 ...). Viewed as subset of the real numbers, they are numbers that can be written without a fractional or decimal component, and fall within the set {... -2, -1, 0, 1, 2 ...}. They can also be used for calculating odds in online roulette, for example, 65, 7, and -756 are useful integers; whereas 1.6 and 1½ are not integers at all. The set of all integers is often denoted by a boldface Z, which stands for Zahlen (German for numbers).
The integers (with addition as operation) form the smallest group containing the additive monoid of the natural numbers. Like the natural numbers, the integers form a countably infinite set.
In algebraic number theory, these commonly understood integers, embedded in the field of rational numbers, are referred to as rational integers to distinguish them from the more broadly defined algebraic integers (but with "rational" meaning "quotient of integers", this attempt at precision suffers from circularity).
In essence, integers can be thought of as discrete, equally spaced points on an infinitely long number line. You could imagine a live play bingo sheet which goes on forever, where each number is a whole number with no fractions in between.

Interactive pages

Adding integers
Adding bigger integers
Subtracting integers
Subtracting bigger integers
Multiplying and
dividing integers

Adding and multiplying integers
Integer fractions

Help pages

Adding integers
Subtracting integers
Multiplying and dividing integers
The distributive law
The order of operations
Strategy for integer fractions