23-15-13-5-14
93
Division by zero is not infinity, it is a forbidden operation in mathematics.
people usually use logic in math and math in logic
You can think of the minus sign as the negation operator in symbolic logic. Take a positive number, for example 5. Negate it one to get -5, then, following the rule from logic that a double negation is the equivalent to doing nothing at all, --5=5. The same goes for any number x.
You use "equal" when comparing two values, quantities, or expressions that have the same value or represent the same amount. This term is often applied in mathematics, logic, and programming to denote equivalence. For example, in equations like 2 + 2 = 4, the two sides are equal.
In normal math, 1 is not equal to 0, so any "proof" that they are equal either uses non-standard definitions, or it is based on faulty logic.
Using faulty logic.
NO! IT DOESN't!!
Yes, in logic, if p equals q, then q also equals p. This is known as the symmetric property of equality.
Using valid mathematics or logic it is not.
93
Equal is the truth table and the circuit are the same. Equivalent is when the truth table is the same but the circuit is different
1 plus 1 equals 1 (in Boolean logic) 1 plus 1 equals 10 (in base 2)
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.
1500
Pins Knocked Down In A Strike
No. By that unsound logic 1 would also equal 3 and indeed every other number up to infinity. "Nearly equalling" is not the same as equalling and therefore this does not work.