Consider 75/15/3
(75/15)/3 = 5/3 = 1.66...
75/(15/3) = 75/5 = 25
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.
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The associative property refers to mathematical expressions where the order of the number is totally interchangeable and will still yield the same answer. Changing the order of a subtraction problem will give you a different answer. For example, 4 - 1 = 3. When switched, 1 - 4 does not equal 3. It equals -3.
Assuming that there is a "plus" after the second 58, the answer is - the associative property of addition.
Answer: The associative property involves three numbers, not two. Of course, you can use one of the numbers more than once. For example, show, by calculation, that (2 x 2) x -2 = 2 x (2 x -2).
Division is not associative. So 12 out of 3 out of 100 can be (12/3)/100 = 12/300 = 0.04 or 12/(3/100) = 12*(100/3) = 400
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A negative exponent indicates division by the base. For example: 8 -3 = 1/(83)= 1/672
Here are some good links to show you.
1-3 != 3-1
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