23-15-13-5-14
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Division by zero is not infinity, it is a forbidden operation in mathematics.
You can think of the minus sign as the negation operator in symbolic logic. Take a positive number, for example 5. Negate it one to get -5, then, following the rule from logic that a double negation is the equivalent to doing nothing at all, --5=5. The same goes for any number x.
people usually use logic in math and math in logic
Answer: you can not divide 0 with its self or any other number. Answer: Since ANY number times 0 = 0, the inverse operation is not defined. It is know that that allowing a division by zero - even if it is 0 / 0 - leads to all kinds of errors. Answer: While your logic is well founded...under your logic 0 divided by 0 does indeed equal n but that does not mean that 0 divided by 0 equals every number...in fact n is an undefined variable that means absolutely nothing (even though you are trying to define it as every number) and math tells us that anything divided by zero (including 0 itself) does not exist or cannot be defined
In normal math, 1 is not equal to 0, so any "proof" that they are equal either uses non-standard definitions, or it is based on faulty logic.
Using faulty logic.
NO! IT DOESN't!!
Using valid mathematics or logic it is not.
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Equal is the truth table and the circuit are the same. Equivalent is when the truth table is the same but the circuit is different
1 plus 1 equals 1 (in Boolean logic) 1 plus 1 equals 10 (in base 2)
Yes. I'm assuming this is talking asking about boolean logic (the question makes little sense otherwise). If a and b are equal, then the complement of a and the complement of b are equal.
No. By that unsound logic 1 would also equal 3 and indeed every other number up to infinity. "Nearly equalling" is not the same as equalling and therefore this does not work.
Pins Knocked Down In A Strike
1500
You mean, when added or multiplied together? Well, that's just logic. There's no real explanation, it's just logic. It's obvious, if you get what I mean.