0
It goes behind. You can write it as --5, which actually means +5.
Addition. Start with nothing. Add 10. Subtract 10. Or first subtract 10, then add 10. Result is back where you started.
If two functions are the inverse of each other, they reverse or undo what the other function does. To give the simplest example, addition and subtraction are inverse functions, so that if you start with 7 and add 3 you get 10, and then if you subtract 3 you are back to 7, which is what you started with, so the subtraction reverses the effect of the addtion (if you subtract the same amount, which in this example was 3).
The inverse operation for subtract 5 is add 5. This is because whatever number you start with, if you first "subtract 5" and then "add 5" or if you first "add 5" and then "subtract 5" you are back to the number you started with.
Palindromic
You do it exactly like decimal subtraction, and when needed you borrow from the next higher place digit, however remember you borrow 2 everytime and not 10. Some people convert the two binary numbers into decimal, do the subtraction and then convert the result back to binary. Following is an example of binary subtraction. 1001 0110 ____ 0011 ____ I started explaining the borrowing process in words but it gets confusing. Please relate it to the borrowing process in decimal.
1
u multiply the back up numbers and subtract the front divided by the down or upper region
Front. On a V6 or V8, driver's side front.
Back.
It is center front.
Some U.S. states require plates (often called tags) in both front and back, others on back only.
An inverse operation is an operation that "undoes" another operation. For example, addition and subtraction are inverse operations, as are multiplication and division. Using inverse operations allows you to reverse the effects of the original operation.