It means that the term inside the brackets needs to be multiplied by the previous term outside the bracket..
a(b + c) = ab + ac =========just distribute the number to all additive terms in the brackets/parentheses
Use the same rules inside brackets as you would outside of brackets. There is no difference between the two.
The text in the brackets must be a question.
Brackets are basically the same as parentheses. If they are inside of parentheses, then you simplify that term before anything else. If they are outside of parentheses, then you simplify the terms in the parentheses first and then the term within the brackets.
It means that the term inside the brackets needs to be multiplied by the previous term outside the bracket..
a(b + c) = ab + ac =========just distribute the number to all additive terms in the brackets/parentheses
Brackets around a number mean that the number is of a negative value. Instead of saying -$40 you would express it as ($40).
no
Use the same rules inside brackets as you would outside of brackets. There is no difference between the two.
Punctuation usually goes inside the parentheses if it's part of the text within the parentheses. If the entire sentence, including the parentheses, is a standalone sentence, then the punctuation goes outside the parentheses.
If you mean a number in Parentheses, it is a ghost note. Meaning, it is not strummed, but you still fret it. E.G. -----4-----5-----(9)----
No. Brackets should be inserted within a sentence, and therefore the full stop should go outside the brackets at the end.
The value is a negative number.
The number in square brackets is the number of Trust Points the contributor has attained.
It means u multiply in by the number in the brackets EX- 2(3)= 2*3= 6
The text in the brackets must be a question.