A mathematical operation, denoted by ~, is commutative over a set S, if
x ~ y = y ~ x for all x and y belonging to S.
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According to the commutative of multiplication, a*b = b*a.
Changing the order of addends does not change their sum. In symbolic form, a + b =b + a. Subtraction is not commutative .
Assuming you mean definition, commutative is a property of an operation such that the order of the operands does not affect the result. Thus for addition, A + B = B + A. Multiplication of numbers is also commutative but multiplication of matrices is not. Subtraction and division are not commutative.
The property that states that when you change the order of the addend or the factor it doesn't change the sum or product.
That's called the commutative property.That's called the commutative property.That's called the commutative property.That's called the commutative property.