Yes. If you are comparing two things then you want them to be exactly the same. If you want to have a more loose comparison you might want to change the way you are processing a value. You could look at just the integer part for example:
=INT(3.5)=INT(3.2)
Obviously 3.5 and 3.2 are not equal, but the INT function is taking just the integer part and comparing them. In this case it is just comparing the 3 in each part, so they are equal.
Two measurements are equal when they have the same numerical value, for example 1 inch is equal to 2.54 centimeters. To show equality between measurements, they must have the same units, or be converted to the same units for comparison.
All percentages are fractions out of 100. In other words 68% means exactly the same thing as 68/100
The mathematical statement of equality is represented by the symbol "=" and is used to show that two expressions are equivalent or have the same value. It signifies that the quantity on the left side of the symbol is exactly the same as the quantity on the right side.
Equivalent Claims
Equivalent claims
It is not. They have exactly the same mass and so must have the same weight.
You can:* Add the same expression to both sides of an equation * Subtract the same expression from both sides * Multiply the same expression (must not be zero) to both sides * Divide both sides by the same expression (must not be zero)
the comparison is exactly the same; 3/6th = a half or 0.5 4/8th = a half or 0.5
The signers of the Declaration of Independence did not proclaim that the equality of all people is self evident. The signers declared that all people are created equal. All people are created exactly the same way. All people live exactly the same way until they are born. A pregnancy looks the same whether the mother is rich or poor. It is after people are born that differences between people become obvious.
Equality is people of all races, genders, religion being treated the same. Equality gives everyone the exact same freedoms.
An equality and equation are essentially the same thing. The equality between two expressions is represented by an equation (and conversely).
I don’t know