CliffsNotes To Go Sweepstakes -- Enter Now to Win an iPod touch Loaded with Cliffs Study Apps

How hot is Levi Johnston?

Sizzlin'!
Not bad. I've seen better.
He's taking the quick fame thing way too far.

View Results

Absolute Value

The concept of absolute value has many applications in the study of calculus. The absolute value of a number x, written | x| may be defined in a variety of ways. On a real number line, the absolute value of a number is the distance, disregarding direction, that the number is from zero. This definition establishes the fact that the absolute value of a number must always be nonnegative—that is, | x|≥0.

A common algebraic definition of absolute value is often stated in three parts, as follows:




Another definition that is sometimes applied to calculus problems is




or the principal square root of x2. Each of these definitions also implies that the absolute value of a number must be a nonnegative.

Cite this article