Those are the rules of multiplication (and division).
The rules are not the same.Multiplication is commutative whereas division is not.Multiplication is associative whereas division is not.
It is true, and it follows from the definition of multiplication and division.
When multiplying integers, multiplying by the same sign will always produce a positive integer. Such as a negative times a negative equals a positive. If the signs are different then the product will be a negative.
They are all numbers and obey the same rules for addition, subtraction, multiplication, division, exponentiation etc.
They are not the same. You can multiply by zero but division by zero is not defined.
Those are the rules of multiplication (and division).
Both need integers around them, to use them.
The rules are not the same.Multiplication is commutative whereas division is not.Multiplication is associative whereas division is not.
The rules for the sign (positive or negative) of the result of a multiplication is the same as division. For multiplication: Positive * Positive --> Positive Positive * Negative --> Negative Negative * Positive --> Negative Negative * Negative --> Positive For division: Positive / Positive --> Positive Positive / Negative --> Negative Negative / Positive --> Negative Negative / Negative --> Positive
It is true, and it follows from the definition of multiplication and division.
The question has no sensible answer because its proposition is not true. Multiplication is commutative, division is not, so the rules are NOT the same.
same ---> answer is positivedifferent ---> answer is negativeBy the way, the two original numbers don't have to be integers. They can be anything ...whole numbers, decimals, mixed numbers, proper or improper fractions, irrationalnumbers, transcendentals, algebraic letters or symbols, numbers in scientific form,logarithms, mambo rhythms, you name it. Those two simple rules are always truefor multiplication and division.
following multiplication integer rules and division rules, you should get: "MULTIPLICATION: minus times minus is plus (negative x negative = positive).....minus times plus is minus (negative x positive = negative).....plus times plus is plus (positive x positive = positive) DIVISION: minus divi minus is plus (negative ÷ negative = positive)......minus divi plus is minus (negative ÷ positive = negative).....plus divi plus is plus (positive ÷ positive = positive)" a division problem is a multiplication problem in disguise
Within parentheses or similar symbols, the same rules apply as when you don't have parentheses. For example, multiplication and division have a higher priority (or precedence) than addition and subtraction.Within parentheses or similar symbols, the same rules apply as when you don't have parentheses. For example, multiplication and division have a higher priority (or precedence) than addition and subtraction.Within parentheses or similar symbols, the same rules apply as when you don't have parentheses. For example, multiplication and division have a higher priority (or precedence) than addition and subtraction.Within parentheses or similar symbols, the same rules apply as when you don't have parentheses. For example, multiplication and division have a higher priority (or precedence) than addition and subtraction.
The rules for division are the same as for multiplication. Positive multiplied (or divided) by negative is negative.
Division is the inverse operation to multiplication. Division by a number (other than zero) is the same as multiplication by its reciprocal.