A statement that can be proven true or false. Not a question, not a command, and not an opinion.
She will fail math if she does not study hard.
If I do not like Math then I do not like Science.
If I do not like math, then I do not like science.
Yes, that term is used in math. Consider an equation; I'll use a simple one: 2x = 14 This is a statement about the equality of the two sides; it is stated that 2, multiplied by "x", is equal to 14. Depending on the value of "x", this statement can be true, or false. In this case, if you replace "x" with 7, the statement is true; if you replace it by any other value, it is NOT true. The equation is said to be "satisfied" by any value which, when replaced for the variable, converts it into a true statement - in this case, 7.
Math is the class, and sqrt() is the method.
A statement that can be proven true or false. Not a question, not a command, and not an opinion.
work it left to right then insert ie
She will fail math if she does not study hard.
If you do not like math, then you do not like science.
If I do not like Math then I do not like Science.
If I do not like math, then I do not like science.
it is a long math question.
sulema salinas
it is the logical "opposite" of a mathematical statement
The inverse of 'If I like math then I like science' is 'If I do not like math then I do not like science'.
The inverse of 'If I like math then I like science' is 'If I do not like math then I do not like science'.