If you have a term such as (x)2, it may not seem that the exponent does anything, because you get x2 regardless of the parentheses. However, in a term such as (2x)2, what you are really doing is multiplying 2x by 2x, which is 4x2, because you have to multiply both the coefficients (the 2) and the two "x"s.
' 15 ' without parentheses does. Except in Accounting, where (15) means ' -15 '.
Parentheses group parts of the equation together and do them first: For example, on a calculator: With parentheses: (14 - 5) ÷ (9 - 6) = 3 Without parentheses: 14 - 5 ÷ 9 - 6 = 7.444 (repeating)
The value of 73 is that it's a prime number
i think it is an exponent hard to describe without seeing
If you have 3 to the power 2 to the power 2, without any parentheses, you have to calculate from right to left. In this case, calculate 2 to the power 2; then calculate 3 to the power (whatever the result you get). If there are parentheses, do the calculation in parentheses first.
That depends. (odd thing to say about a math problem, I know...)If there are parentheses anywhere then it changes. But, without any it's 5*-4^2=-80However, with parentheses it'll be positive ... 80
2(x-5) without parentheses = -3
Since 88 is given as a number without an exponent, its implied exponent is 1.
Whenever you see a variable (letter) without any exponent, it's exponent is 1.
What is the difference between the population and sample regression functions? Is this a distinction without difference?
No, a paraphrase should not be in parentheses. When paraphrasing, you should reword the original text in your own words, without the use of parentheses.
' 15 ' without parentheses does. Except in Accounting, where (15) means ' -15 '.
Without a decimal, there is no difference.
Without the difference between scalars and vectors the Universe doesn't work !
While it is true that citations are commonly placed within parentheses, they can also be presented in other formats such as footnotes or endnotes. The purpose of using parentheses for citations is to acknowledge the source of information without disrupting the flow of the main text.
The guitar.
not really