Because otherwise it would not be an "ordered" pair.
The pair (2, 3) is the same as the pair (3, 2) but the ORDERED pair (2, 3) is NOT the same as the ORDERED pair (3, 2). In an ordered pair the order of the numbers does matter.
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When the order in which they are given makes no difference.
It is called an ordered pair.
Because otherwise it would not be an "ordered" pair.
because....
Ordered pairs are used to locate points on the graph. The first number in an ordered pair corresponds to the horizontal axis, and the second corresponds to the vertical axis.
The pair (2, 3) is the same as the pair (3, 2) but the ORDERED pair (2, 3) is NOT the same as the ORDERED pair (3, 2). In an ordered pair the order of the numbers does matter.
The inverse of an ordered pair (a,b) is the pair (b,a). So you simply switch the order.
An ordered pair is a list of two numbers, in which the order matters. For example, (5, 2) is an ordered pair; this pair is not the same as (2, 5). For comparison, for the numbers in a set the order does not matter.
idk why are you asking me btw this site is useless dont come here
When the order in which they are given makes no difference.
It is called an ordered pair.
In the ordered pair (a, b), the object a is called the first entry, and the object b the second entry of the pair. Alternatively, the objects are called the first and second coordinates, or the left and right projections of the ordered pair.
False
Yes, it matters.