No because if a=4 and b=4 then a=b and not a can equal 6 and not b can equal 5 so ~a is not = to ~b
2b
the Answer is Sometimes
No.Neither are commutative: a - b does not equal b - a, and a/b does not equal b/a.Neither is associative: (a - b) - c does not equal a - (b - c), and (a/b)/c does not equal a/(b/c).Examples of these are:4 - 2 does not equal 2 - 4.1/3 does not equal 3/1.(6 - 5) - 1 does not equal 6 - (5 - 1).(10/2)/2 does not equal 10/(2/2).
It's equal to positive b squared, or (b x b) .
yes. you are right. both parts of the question has to be equal.
Addition does. Subtraction, just as with numbers: a - b is not equal to b - a, but you can change a - b to -b + a.Addition does. Subtraction, just as with numbers: a - b is not equal to b - a, but you can change a - b to -b + a.Addition does. Subtraction, just as with numbers: a - b is not equal to b - a, but you can change a - b to -b + a.Addition does. Subtraction, just as with numbers: a - b is not equal to b - a, but you can change a - b to -b + a.
if a is less than and not equal to b, it is written a < bIf a is less than or equal to b, it is written a ≤ b
Yes. I'm assuming this is talking asking about boolean logic (the question makes little sense otherwise). If a and b are equal, then the complement of a and the complement of b are equal.
(a+b)(a+b)Also equal to a2+2ab+b2
System.out.println(a.equals(b) ? "They are equal" : "They are different");System.out.println(a.equals(b) ? "They are equal" : "They are different");System.out.println(a.equals(b) ? "They are equal" : "They are different");System.out.println(a.equals(b) ? "They are equal" : "They are different");
B4 or B*B*B*B