Yes, because 1+2 and 2+1 have the same sum.
Matrix addition is commutative if the elements in the matrices are themselves commutative.Matrix multiplication is not commutative.
The commutative property of addition can be stated as: a+b = b+a
what is the commutative operation of addition
Yes it is : a + b = b + a for all integers a and b. In fact , if an operation is called addition you can bet that it is commutative. It would be perverse to call an non-commutative operation addition.
yes, it is
Yes. Multiplication is commutative, just like addition.
Addition and multiplication are operations on integers that are commutative.
Yes, complex numbers obey the commutative property of addition.
The commutative property of addition and the commutative property of multiplication.
All real numbers are commutative under addition and multiplication.
The commutative property of addition states that x + y = y + x for any two elements x and y.
Commutative law: The order of the operands doesn't change the result. For example, 4 + 3 = 3 + 4. Associative: (1 + 2) + 3 = 1 + (2 + 3) - it doesn't matter which addition you do first. Both laws are valid for addition, and for multiplication (as these are usually defined, with numbers. However, special "multiplications" have been defined that are not associative, or not commutative - for example, the cross product of vectors, or multiplication of matrices are not commutative.