By the end of this chapter you'll be able to…

  • 1Define integers as the set of positive numbers, negative numbers, and zero
  • 2Represent integers on a number line with zero at the centre
  • 3Compare integers using the number line (right = greater)
  • 4Understand that any positive integer > any negative integer
  • 5Order integers in ascending and descending order
  • 6Define and calculate absolute value |x| (distance from zero)
  • 7Represent real-life situations using positive and negative integers
  • 8Understand opposites (e.g., −3 is the opposite of 3)
💡
Why this chapter matters
Integers complete the number system and are essential for algebra, coordinate geometry, physics (forces, temperature, electric charge), economics (profit/loss, credit/debit), and everyday life (temperatures, bank balances, elevations). Every equation, graph, and real-world mathematical model in higher classes depends on negative numbers.

Before you start — revise these

A 5-minute refresher here will save you 30 minutes of confusion below.

The Other Side of Zero — Class 6 Maths (Ganita Prakash)

"Until now, numbers have only gone up from zero. But there is a whole world on the other side — the world of negative numbers."

1. About This Chapter

Until Class 6, students have worked with natural numbers (1, 2, 3...) and whole numbers (0, 1, 2, 3...). Chapter 10 of Ganita Prakash shatters the floor: numbers exist below zero too. These are negative integers. The chapter introduces integers — the set of positive numbers, negative numbers, and zero — and shows how they model real situations like temperatures below freezing, floors below ground, losses in business, and depths below sea level.


2. What Are Integers?

Integers include:

  • Positive integers: +1, +2, +3, ... (also written as 1, 2, 3...)
  • Zero: 0 (neither positive nor negative)
  • Negative integers: −1, −2, −3, ...

The set of integers is written as:


3. Why Negative Numbers? — Real-Life Examples

Negative numbers are not just mathematical abstractions — they describe the real world:

SituationPositive MeansNegative Means
TemperatureAbove 0°CBelow 0°C (−5°C, −10°C)
Money/Bank BalanceCredit/ProfitDebit/Loss/Debt
Building FloorsAbove ground (1st floor, 2nd...)Below ground (Basement −1, −2...)
Sea LevelHeight above sea levelDepth below sea level
SportsPoints scoredPenalty points

4. The Number Line with Integers

The number line extends to the LEFT of zero:

<---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|--->
  −5  −4  −3  −2  −1   0   1   2   3   4   5

Key observations:

  • Zero is at the centre
  • Positive integers are to the RIGHT of zero
  • Negative integers are to the LEFT of zero
  • Numbers increase as you move RIGHT
  • Numbers decrease as you move LEFT

5. Comparing Integers

Rule 1: Positive vs Negative

Any positive integer is greater than any negative integer.

Rule 2: Two Positives

The one further right on the number line is greater.

Rule 3: Two Negatives

The one closer to zero (further right) is greater.

Think of temperature: −3°C is warmer than −5°C!

Rule 4: Any number is greater than numbers to its left.


6. Absolute Value — Distance from Zero

The absolute value of an integer is its distance from zero on the number line, regardless of direction. It is always non-negative.

The absolute value of a number is written between two vertical bars: |x|.

Key insights:

  • |a| is always ≥ 0 (never negative)
  • |a| = |−a| (opposites have the same absolute value)
  • |a| = 0 only when a = 0

7. Ordering Integers

Arrange in ascending order: 3, −7, 0, −2, 5, −1

On the number line from left to right: −7, −2, −1, 0, 3, 5 ✓

Arrange in descending order: −4, 2, −8, 0, 6 From right to left: 6, 2, 0, −4, −8 ✓


8. Opposites

Every positive integer has an opposite negative integer at the same distance from zero:

NumberOpposite
3−3
7−7
00 (opposite of itself)
−55

Opposites are reflections across zero on the number line.


9. Representing Real Situations with Integers

SituationInteger
Temperature 5°C below zero−5°C
Profit of ₹200+200 or 200
Loss of ₹150−150
10 m above sea level+10 m or 10 m
25 m below sea level−25 m
3rd floor above ground+3
2nd basement−2
Deposit in bank+₹500
Withdrawal from bank−₹500

10. Addition and Subtraction of Integers (Introduction)

The chapter introduces basic integer operations conceptually through the number line:

  • Moving RIGHT on the number line = adding a positive number
  • Moving LEFT on the number line = adding a negative number (or subtracting)

Example: 3 + (−5) = −2 Start at 3, move 5 steps left → land at −2.

This is developed more fully in Class 7 — Class 6 focuses on understanding the number system and comparison.


11. Key Concepts Summary

ConceptDefinitionExample
IntegerWhole number that can be positive, negative, or zero..., −3, −2, −1, 0, 1, 2, 3...
Negative IntegerInteger less than zero−1, −5, −100
Positive IntegerInteger greater than zero1, 5, 100
Number LineVisual representation of integers in orderZero at centre
Absolute ValueDistance from zero on the number line
OppositeNumber at equal distance from zero on opposite sideOpposite of 4 is −4

12. Important Vocabulary

  • Integer: A number from the set {..., −3, −2, −1, 0, 1, 2, 3, ...}
  • Negative: Less than zero
  • Positive: Greater than zero
  • Number Line: A straight line with numbers placed at equal intervals
  • Absolute Value: The distance of a number from zero, always non-negative
  • Opposite: The number obtained by changing the sign (e.g., opposite of −6 is 6)

13. Worked Examples

Example 1: Compare using >, <, or =

a) −8 ___ 3 → −8 < 3 (negative < positive)
b) −2 ___ −7 → −2 > −7 (−2 is to the right of −7)
c) |−9| ___ 9 → |−9| = 9, so |−9| = 9

Example 2: Write as integers

a) 15°C below zero → −15°C
b) A deposit of ₹750 → +750
c) 30 m below sea level → −30 m
d) 5th floor above ground → +5

Example 3: Arrange in ascending order

−12, 7, 0, −5, 3, −1

Solution: On number line from left to right: −12, −5, −1, 0, 3, 7

Example 4: Find the absolute value

|−15| = 15, |23| = 23, |0| = 0, |−1| = 1


14. Conclusion

The Other Side of Zero expands the mathematical universe of Class 6 students from the familiar land of positive numbers into the complete world of integers. This understanding — that numbers can represent direction (above/below, profit/loss, forward/backward) — is foundational for algebra, coordinate geometry, physics, economics, and virtually every quantitative discipline. Integers complete the number line and prepare students for the rational numbers, equations, and graphs that await in higher classes.

Key formulas & results

Everything you need to memorise, in one card. Screenshot this for revision.

⚠️

Common mistakes & fixes

These are the exact errors that cost students marks in board exams. Read them once, save yourself the trouble.

WATCH OUT
WATCH OUT
WATCH OUT
WATCH OUT
WATCH OUT

Practice problems

Try each one yourself before tapping "Show solution". Active recall > rereading.

Q1MEDIUM
Write the following as integers: (a) 12°C below zero (b) A profit of ₹350 (c) 40 m below sea level (d) 3rd basement
Show solution
(a) −12 (b) +350 (c) −40 (d) −3
Q2MEDIUM
Arrange in descending order: −9, 4, 0, −3, 7, −1
Show solution
7, 4, 0, −1, −3, −9
Q3MEDIUM
Find: |−17|, |25|, |0|, |−1|
Show solution
17, 25, 0, 1
Q4MEDIUM
Which is greater: −15 or −8? Explain using the number line.
Show solution
−8 > −15. On the number line, −8 is to the right of −15, and numbers increase to the right.

5-minute revision

The whole chapter, distilled. Read this the night before the exam.

  • Integers: ..., −3, −2, −1, 0, 1, 2, 3, ...
  • Number line: zero centre, positives right, negatives left
  • Right = greater, Left = smaller
  • Any positive > any negative
  • Comparing negatives: closer to zero = greater
  • Absolute value |x| = distance from zero, always ≥ 0
  • Opposite of x = −x (e.g., opposite of 7 is −7)
  • 0 is neither positive nor negative

CBSE marks blueprint

Where the marks come from in this chapter — so you can plan your prep.

Where this shows up in the real world

This chapter isn't just an exam topic — it lives in the world around you.

Questions students ask

The real ones — pulled from the Q&A community and tutor sessions.

Verified by the tuition.in editorial team
Last reviewed on 1 June 2026. Written and reviewed by subject-matter experts — read about our process.
Editorial process →
Header Logo