The expression "0 is not defined" typically refers to situations such as division by zero, where the mathematical operation does not yield a meaningful result. For example, dividing a number by zero does not produce a unique quotient, as there is no number that, when multiplied by zero, gives a non-zero number. Therefore, in certain contexts, like calculus and algebra, division by zero is considered undefined to maintain mathematical consistency.
Yes: 02 = 0 x 0 = 0
If defined, they are inverse operations. However, multiplication and division is a somewhat flawed example because division by 0 is not defined. So, if you have a number x, then x*0 = 0 but 0/0 is not x: it is not defined.
-17
You can, but the result would be 0/0 which is not defined.
0 divided by 0 is not defined.
2-dimensional Cartesian space is naturally split into four quadrants, with one quadrant defined by x>0, y>0; one defined by x<0, y>0; one defined by x<0, y<0; and, one defined by x>0, y<0.
0
It is not defined.
Anything out of 0 is not defined.
No. For example, division by 0 is not defined.
Yes: 02 = 0 x 0 = 0
If defined, they are inverse operations. However, multiplication and division is a somewhat flawed example because division by 0 is not defined. So, if you have a number x, then x*0 = 0 but 0/0 is not x: it is not defined.
Division by zero is not defined.
0, because division by 0 is not defined.
4
-17
Not defined