Division (and subtraction, for that matter) is not associative. Here is an example to show that it is not associative: (8/4)/2 = 2/2 = 1 8/(4/2) = 8/2 = 4 Addition and multiplication are the only two arithmetic operations that have the associative property.
vuin
Well, honey, the statement that division of a whole number is associative is as false as claiming you can wear a swimsuit in a blizzard. Just take the numbers 10, 5, and 2 for example. (10 ÷ 5) ÷ 2 is not the same as 10 ÷ (5 ÷ 2). So, there you have it - a sassy counterexample for you!
The associative property refers to mathematical expressions where the order of the number is totally interchangeable and will still yield the same answer. Changing the order of a subtraction problem will give you a different answer. For example, 4 - 1 = 3. When switched, 1 - 4 does not equal 3. It equals -3.
Assuming that there is a "plus" after the second 58, the answer is - the associative property of addition.
Answer: The associative property involves three numbers, not two. Of course, you can use one of the numbers more than once. For example, show, by calculation, that (2 x 2) x -2 = 2 x (2 x -2).
Division is not associative. So 12 out of 3 out of 100 can be (12/3)/100 = 12/300 = 0.04 or 12/(3/100) = 12*(100/3) = 400
u give a tour for example show them were everthing is
She handed me the book.
A negative exponent indicates division by the base. For example: 8 -3 = 1/(83)= 1/672
Here are some good links to show you.
1-3 != 3-1