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What role of operations that applies when you are solving an equation does not apply when your solving an inequality?"
Some operations cannot be done. For example, if we take the equation x=2/0, there is no result, because division by 0 is not defined.
No professions use order of operations. It is just a method of solving an equation.
Because if you did operations in an impermissible order, or violated laws of operations, then your solution to the equation is wrong.
That completely depends on exactly what operation you have in mind. You can "do" several different types of operations to an equation, such as solve it, differentiate it, rearrange it, factor it, or apply the same arithmetic procedure to both sides of it. But you can't "do" the equation.
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That depends on the equation. In general, you'll try to isolate the variable, by using operations (on both sides of the equation) that get rid of anything other than the variable, on the side the variable is on.
A two-step equation.
The equation remains in 'balance'
What role of operations that applies when you are solving an equation does not apply when your solving an inequality?"
Some operations cannot be done. For example, if we take the equation x=2/0, there is no result, because division by 0 is not defined.
A two-step equation is a mathematical equation that requires two steps to solve. It involves applying inverse operations to isolate the variable on one side of the equation. The goal is to determine the value of the variable that satisfies the equation.
a two step eqation
No professions use order of operations. It is just a method of solving an equation.
Because if you did operations in an impermissible order, or violated laws of operations, then your solution to the equation is wrong.
It will then have 2 different roots If the discriminant is zero than it will have have 2 equal roots
That completely depends on exactly what operation you have in mind. You can "do" several different types of operations to an equation, such as solve it, differentiate it, rearrange it, factor it, or apply the same arithmetic procedure to both sides of it. But you can't "do" the equation.