If you write them as questions yes - if you just write a statement you are not going to get the right answer because it is not a question. For example, don't write "Dogs are carnivores true or false" write "Are dogs carnivores?"
You write out a bunch of facts. Then change some of them to be false and mix them in with the true ones so the students can pick if each statement is true or false.
My teacher told me to write true or false for the statement.
true
False
True(Prime factorization is to write a composite number as a product of its prime factors).
True AND False OR True evaluates to True. IT seems like it does not matter which is evaluated first as: (True AND False) OR True = False OR True = True True AND (False OR True) = True AND True = True But, it does matter as with False AND False OR True: (False AND False) OR True = False OR True = True False AND (False OR True) = False AND True = False and True OR False AND False: (True OR False) AND False = True AND False = False True OR (False AND False) = True OR False = True Evaluated left to right gives a different answer if the operators are reversed (as can be seen above), so AND and OR need an order of evaluation. AND can be replaced by multiply, OR by add, and BODMAS says multiply is evaluated before add; thus AND should be evaluated before OR - the C programming language follows this convention. This makes the original question: True AND False OR True = (True AND False) OR True = False OR True = True
did Columbus ever learn how to read or write
ok it is a hard question and i have no idea what it is and you need to ask a different person.
ok
False. It is software.
If you use a variable, or variables, with an equation, or with an inequality, it is neither true nor false until you replace the variables with specific values.
True