The absolute value of a number is its distance from the origin on the x-axis. It's always non-negative. If x<0, then β£xβ£=βx. If xβ₯0, then β£xβ£=x.
For β£β8β£, since β8<0, the result is β(β8)=8.
For β£12β£, since 12>0, the result is simply 12.
For β£0β£, the result is 0, as it has no distance from itself.
Think of absolute value as a 'positivity machine.' It doesn't care if you have 50 dollars or a debt of 50 dollars, it only sees the amount: 50! The distance from zero is always positive. This is why the absolute value of any non-zero number, whether it's β10 or 10, always comes out as a positive value.