the hypothesis
conditional statement
A conditional statement
That is correct.
It is the biconditional.
Converse
The part of a conditional statement that follows the word 'then' is the conclusion.
The IF part of a conditional statement sets the condition or criteria that needs to be met for the subsequent action to occur. It is the part that is evaluated as either true or false, determining the flow of the statement.
A conditional statement is indeed a statement that can be put in the form "if A, then B". The only time this conditional statement is false is when both A is true and also B is false.Read more: http://wiki.answers.com/What_is_a_conditional_statement#ixzz1lda5tB6E
true
No, the conclusion of a statement, often referred to as the “consequent,” is the part that follows the “if” clause in a conditional statement. The "then" part is the antecedent. It is the part that comes first and sets the condition for the statement to hold true.
hypothesis
The antecedent is the "if" part of a conditional statement, while the consequent is the "then" part. The antecedent is the condition that must be met for the consequent to occur.
In a conditional statement, the antecedent is the condition that must be met for the consequent to occur. The antecedent is like the "if" part of the statement, while the consequent is the "then" part that follows if the condition is satisfied.
A conditional statement uses the words if... Then
Another name for that is the conditional statement.
Conditional statement conclusions refer to the outcomes derived from "if-then" statements in logic. In a conditional statement, the "if" part is called the antecedent, and the "then" part is the consequent. The conclusion is valid if the antecedent is true, leading to the assertion that the consequent must also be true. For example, in the statement "If it rains, then the ground will be wet," the conclusion is that if it indeed rains, the ground will be wet.
The conditional statement in foxpro is DID YOU GET IT