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1. Divide

2. Multiply (compare)

3. Subtract

4. Compare

5. Bring down

6. Start over

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16y ago
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Tayamoko Iverson

Lvl 2
2y ago

use the symbol to list the step of complex divisions

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Q: What are the six steps of complex division?
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Do answers to complex number division need to be in standard form?

Not necessarily.


How do you enter complex fractions on ti inspire?

You can enter complex fractions on a TI-Inspire calculator, even though there is not a fraction button. Since a fraction bar essentially means to divide, so the division button is a fraction bar.


Can an odd number be divided by six?

With the exception of zero, anything can be divided by anything. Division by zero is undefined. Some odd numbers are divisible by 6, some aren't.


The sum of two complex numbers is always a complex number?

A "complex number" is a number of the form a+bi, where a and b are both real numbers and i is the principal square root of -1. Since b can be equal to 0, you see that the real numbers are a subset of the complex numbers. Similarly, since a can be zero, the imaginary numbers are a subset of the complex numbers. So let's take two complex numbers: a+bi and c+di (where a, b, c, and d are real). We add them together and we get: (a+c) + (b+d)i The sum of two real numbers is always real, so a+c is a real number and b+d is a real number, so the sum of two complex numbers is a complex number. What you may really be wondering is whether the sum of two non-real complex numbers can ever be a real number. The answer is yes: (3+2i) + (5-2i) = 8. In fact, the complex numbers form an algebraic field. The sum, difference, product, and quotient of any two complex numbers (except division by 0) is a complex number (keeping in mind the special case that both real and imaginary numbers are a subset of the complex numbers).


How do change a complex number to its standard form?

It isn't clear in what form you have the complex number. But you can change it from the form (absolute value, angle) to the form (real part + imaginary part) using the polar-rectangular conversion available on scientific calculators (and the other way round, with the rectangular-polar conversion). Note that a complex number in the form (real part + imaginary part) is most appropriate for addition and subtraction, while a complex number of the form (absolute value, angle) is most appropriate for multiplication or division, so depending on the operations, you may want to convert back and forth several times.