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What are the "following?"
Associative property
Division (and subtraction, for that matter) is not associative. Here is an example to show that it is not associative: (8/4)/2 = 2/2 = 1 8/(4/2) = 8/2 = 4 Addition and multiplication are the only two arithmetic operations that have the associative property.
associative property example: (a+b)+c = a+(b+c)
No, subtraction is not associative. The associative property states that the grouping of numbers does not affect the result of an operation. For example, in subtraction, (5 - 3) - 2 equals 0, while 5 - (3 - 2) equals 4, demonstrating that changing the grouping changes the result. Thus, subtraction fails to satisfy the associative property.
What are the "following?"
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NAND
Associative property
Division (and subtraction, for that matter) is not associative. Here is an example to show that it is not associative: (8/4)/2 = 2/2 = 1 8/(4/2) = 8/2 = 4 Addition and multiplication are the only two arithmetic operations that have the associative property.
The associative property, for example a + b + c = a + c + b
vuin
associative property example: (a+b)+c = a+(b+c)
No, subtraction is not associative. The associative property states that the grouping of numbers does not affect the result of an operation. For example, in subtraction, (5 - 3) - 2 equals 0, while 5 - (3 - 2) equals 4, demonstrating that changing the grouping changes the result. Thus, subtraction fails to satisfy the associative property.
The associative property is sometimes called the associative law. It refers to the principle that the way in which numbers are grouped in an operation does not affect the final result, specifically in addition and multiplication. For example, in addition, (a + b) + c is the same as a + (b + c).
(1 + 2) + 3 = 1 + (2 + 3)
( 2 + 7 ) + 10 = ( 7 + 10 ) + 2 ( 3 * 9 ) * 4 = 3 * ( 9 * 4 ) The associative property means you can move the terms of the expression around without changing the value. Multiplication and addition are both associative.