Yes, ( m - 2 ) is a polynomial. It is a linear polynomial, which is a type of polynomial of degree 1. Polynomials are defined as expressions that consist of variables raised to non-negative integer powers, and ( m - 2 ) fits this definition with the variable ( m ) raised to the first power and a constant term.
(m - 6n)(m + 2n)
(m + 2n)(m - 6n)
It is a polynomial (monomial). It is a polynomial (monomial). It is a polynomial (monomial). It is a polynomial (monomial).
Polynomial vs non polynomial time complexity
No.
(m - 6n)(m + 2n)
(m + 2n)(m - 6n)
mn(n4-m2)mn(n2+m)(n2-m)
It is a polynomial (monomial). It is a polynomial (monomial). It is a polynomial (monomial). It is a polynomial (monomial).
You can evaluate a polynomial, you can factorise a polynomial, you can solve a polynomial equation. But a polynomial is not a specific question so it cannot be answered.
No. A matrix polynomial is an algebraic expression in which the variable is a matrix. A polynomial matrix is a matrix in which each element is a polynomial.
Polynomial vs non polynomial time complexity
No.
monomial
"Non-polynomial" can mean just about anything... How alike it is with the polynomial depends on what specifically you choose to include.
Evaluating a polynomial is finding the value of the polynomial for a given value of the variable, usually denoted by x. Solving a polynomial equation is finding the value of the variable, x, for which the polynomial equation is true.
It will be a cubic polynomial.